FIRST A WARNING!!
As I think Britton30 pointed out any tampering, dismantling, or attempts at repairing these units is potentially fatal as referenced in Brinks post on a teen death. From personal experience I can say that during my uninformed years I have by sheer accident breached some of the terminals while taking these devices apart and have witnessed the destruction of the item that came into contact with the stored energy with the capacitors in thee units.
I might add that this applies to anyone dismantling microwave ovens, old TV sets or ANY device that uses capacitors in any size - even the small ones can BITE - you must treat all capacitors as charged - to ignore this warning is foolhardy and as stated potentially fatal.
Working as an RN I can attest to the power of these electrical components in that they are the actuating "item" / component in a defibrillator machine. Now we have all seen how those things work (or supposedly work - dramatised for viewers) on TV or films but in reality it does stop the heart!
However:-
Seeing there is a debate within the tutorial on PSU's I felt it necessary to start a new thread for any discussion or debate that isn't strictly general information on PSU's for average user.
So given that I do have a fairly limited and self taught knowledge in that I do know that high currents that are needed within a computer can be supplied by a rectified voltage source form a mains transformer.
However to supply the currents that we now need by purely using a dedicated transformer/s requires huge, heavy, and VERY expensive transformers, therefore it takes some very clever switched mode circuitry to be able to use smaller and therefore cheaper transformers to produce the currents that are required.
I did some researching and came up with this ref and some very interesting videos should anyone want to see what goes on in a PSU.
Switching-power-supply « « Electronic Circuits diagrams Schematics Projects*:: Next.gr
AGAIN - WARNING!!
Any tampering, dismantling, or attempts at repairing these units is potentially fatal!!
As I think Britton30 pointed out any tampering, dismantling, or attempts at repairing these units is potentially fatal as referenced in Brinks post on a teen death. From personal experience I can say that during my uninformed years I have by sheer accident breached some of the terminals while taking these devices apart and have witnessed the destruction of the item that came into contact with the stored energy with the capacitors in thee units.
I might add that this applies to anyone dismantling microwave ovens, old TV sets or ANY device that uses capacitors in any size - even the small ones can BITE - you must treat all capacitors as charged - to ignore this warning is foolhardy and as stated potentially fatal.
Working as an RN I can attest to the power of these electrical components in that they are the actuating "item" / component in a defibrillator machine. Now we have all seen how those things work (or supposedly work - dramatised for viewers) on TV or films but in reality it does stop the heart!
However:-
Seeing there is a debate within the tutorial on PSU's I felt it necessary to start a new thread for any discussion or debate that isn't strictly general information on PSU's for average user.
So given that I do have a fairly limited and self taught knowledge in that I do know that high currents that are needed within a computer can be supplied by a rectified voltage source form a mains transformer.
However to supply the currents that we now need by purely using a dedicated transformer/s requires huge, heavy, and VERY expensive transformers, therefore it takes some very clever switched mode circuitry to be able to use smaller and therefore cheaper transformers to produce the currents that are required.
I did some researching and came up with this ref and some very interesting videos should anyone want to see what goes on in a PSU.
Switching-power-supply « « Electronic Circuits diagrams Schematics Projects*:: Next.gr
AGAIN - WARNING!!
Any tampering, dismantling, or attempts at repairing these units is potentially fatal!!
My Computer
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Own build (new) Desk1 / Asus ROG Win 7 / Desk2 1st build
- OS
- Desk1 7 Home Prem / Desk2 10 Pro / Main lap Asus ROG 10 Pro 2 laptop Toshiba 7 Pro Asus P2520 7 & 10
- CPU
- Desk1 i5 3750K / Laptop i7 GTX 860M / Desk2 i5 2500
- Motherboard
- Desk1 Asus P877-V / Desk2 Gigabyte H67 UD3H / Laptop ?
- Memory
- Desk1 8GB (1866) / Desk2 16GB (1333) / Laptop 8Gb DDR3
- Graphics Card(s)
- Desk 1& 2NVidia GTX 650 & Laptops on board Intel
- Sound Card
- Desk 1 & 2 -XONAR DG Realtek High Def audio Laptop
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Desk 1 Benq HD 2450 / Desk2 Philips 24" / Laptop 17.5"
- Screen Resolution
- 1920x1080 D1 & D2 & Laptop 1
- Hard Drives
- Desk1 Samsung 120GB 830 SSD
Asus ROG 256GB 850 Pro SSD
Desk2 Samsung 840 256 SSD
Toshiba 120GB EVO
- PSU
- Desk 1 Corsair HX 1050/ Laptop ? / Desk 2 Corsair HX 650
- Case
- Desk 1 Cooler HAF XM ? Toshiba laptop / Desk2 Coolermaster
- Cooling
- Fans on all Desk1 -2 Desk2 - all Coolermasters 5 Laptop ?
- Keyboard
- Desk 1 MS Sidewinder X6 Desk 2 MS Sidewinder X 4
- Mouse
- Desk 1&2 - Gigabyte MS 900 gamer - laptop - Logitec wireless
- Internet Speed
- ADSL2+
- Other Info
- One other Desktop (tester) and spare Toshba laptop both with SSD's
Running Kaspersky 2016 ISS on all machines config'd identically
Logitec audio stereo systems on each machine (x3)
Canon MG5250MFC
Router/modem TP-Link running WPA2SK

