Hooky HP E3610A
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Use tags for the type of equipment your topic is about. Include the "repairs" tag, too, when appropriate. If a new tag is needed, request one in the TEAdministration forum.
Hooky HP E3610A
Just got an HP E3610A power supply from eBay for a respectable price. Initially looks good.
Oh now hang on a minute, no it doesn't. There's a modification, clearly an insane one. There is what looks like a series 1n4148 with the negative lead
Some people! I will have to very carefully check this one out and inspect it I think...
Oh now hang on a minute, no it doesn't. There's a modification, clearly an insane one. There is what looks like a series 1n4148 with the negative lead
Some people! I will have to very carefully check this one out and inspect it I think...
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Red annulus on both +ve and -ve terminals?bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 12:24 pm Just got an HP E3610A power supply from eBay for a respectable price. Initially looks good.
...
Oh now hang on a minute, no it doesn't. There's a modification, clearly an insane one. There is what looks like a series 1n4148 with the negative lead ...
Some people! I will have to very carefully check this one out and inspect it I think...
Can it supply the rated current? 1N4148 are 300mA devices, and they show 290mA
"Saving up for a dual output PSU". Really?
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Seems like a strange bodge. I'm wondering whether there might be a legitimate reason for doing it. Why a 1N4148 and not a 1N4007?
From the photos it looks clean and not codged about, but you can't tell until you have a good look.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Well considering the diode fell to bits instantly when I touched it, it tried at least.tggzzz wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 1:03 pmRed annulus on both +ve and -ve terminals?bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 12:24 pm Just got an HP E3610A power supply from eBay for a respectable price. Initially looks good.
...
Oh now hang on a minute, no it doesn't. There's a modification, clearly an insane one. There is what looks like a series 1n4148 with the negative lead ...
Some people! I will have to very carefully check this one out and inspect it I think...
Can it supply the rated current? 1N4148 are 300mA devices, and they show 290mA
"Saving up for a dual output PSU". Really?
This has been repaired as attached. The voltage drop was calibrated out by the seller. Obviously this changes due to the load and how much smoke was coming out of the 1N4148.
Of course now we have problem number two which is the drift! Fortunately not the seller’s doing this one. References are spot on and no drift. U1 is bad. This is the voltage amplifier and is an LM741. Large thermal drift. This is a known issue with these and later ones had LF411CN instead. I have some new TI 741’s so I’ll stick one in and if that doesn’t improve it, I’ll order some LF411’s.
Initially I thought it was 1999 vintage but it’s a bit earlier at 1992. I’ll go through the ECNs and apply them as well if I can be arsed.
Neutral feedback will be left as it’s obvious the seller was trying to hide this.
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
My only conclusion is a previous owner was a fuckwit.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
If you can demonstrate they calibrated it out, then I'd screw the vendor - and neutral feedback seems unusually generous.
I'm sure you can get better and cheaper at Newbury or Dunstable Downs. Not sure whether I'll take a full car, but I definitely don't have any PSUs to offload.
Alternatively there's the Ramco auction tomorrow, with >30 PSUs up for grabs, including some E3610As
https://www.bidspotter.co.uk/en-gb/auct ... amco-11361
Or how about a droolworthy Agilent scope
https://www.bidspotter.co.uk/en-gb/auct ... 86008fc798
Not sure I could afford to buy probes, though.
- Cubdriver
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
I vaguely remember reading about the logic behind the colors on the binding posts, and it being that the negative terminals were not at ground potential unless jumpered to the adjacent ground terminal; if that was not done they were floating and as supplies could be connected in series to boost voltage (to a point), the negative terminal could be hot, thus the red rings. I personally don’t like it, and think they should have used red & black for the outputs, and green for the ground, but they didn’t consult me.tggzzz wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 1:03 pmRed annulus on both +ve and -ve terminals?bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 12:24 pm Just got an HP E3610A power supply from eBay for a respectable price. Initially looks good.
...
Oh now hang on a minute, no it doesn't. There's a modification, clearly an insane one. There is what looks like a series 1n4148 with the negative lead ...
Some people! I will have to very carefully check this one out and inspect it I think...
No idea why in the wide, wide world of sports someone would have installed that diode! Weird.
-Pat
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
There's some good stuff in there. I am tempted by an E3631A but I don't need it and it has a fan.tggzzz wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 2:30 pmIf you can demonstrate they calibrated it out, then I'd screw the vendor - and neutral feedback seems unusually generous.
I'm sure you can get better and cheaper at Newbury or Dunstable Downs. Not sure whether I'll take a full car, but I definitely don't have any PSUs to offload.
Alternatively there's the Ramco auction tomorrow, with >30 PSUs up for grabs, including some E3610As
https://www.bidspotter.co.uk/en-gb/auct ... amco-11361
Or how about a droolworthy Agilent scope
https://www.bidspotter.co.uk/en-gb/auct ... 86008fc798
Not sure I could afford to buy probes, though.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Ok so this is now repaired and not drifting. As suspected the voltage amplifier opamp was wonky. It was replaced with a TI UA741CP which is just what I happened to have lying around. I'll calibrate it another day but it's delivering the rated current properly now anyway
The culprit...
I'll have a think about the seller. It was an easy enough fix and performance is as expected now. Neutral is fine. If I was a novice or without the diagnostic ability I have I probably would have just returned it.
The culprit...
I'll have a think about the seller. It was an easy enough fix and performance is as expected now. Neutral is fine. If I was a novice or without the diagnostic ability I have I probably would have just returned it.
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
From what you have said, the seller deliberately misrepresented its operation in two ways: calibrating out the diode, and choosing a current 10% of the PSU's capacity and just under the diode's capacity.
That deserves a rap over the knuckles. At least ask for demand 50% off.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
If you get a refund then you can't leave negative or neutral feedback. Money is less important than tarnishing his reputationtggzzz wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 4:55 pmFrom what you have said, the seller deliberately misrepresented its operation in two ways: calibrating out the diode, and choosing a current 10% of the PSU's capacity and just under the diode's capacity.
That deserves a rap over the knuckles. At least ask for demand 50% off.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Gotta love those little, or not so little, surprises and when you confront the seller you get a bunch of dumb and dumber.
The 500 series plug-in's with the switched out vacuum tubes comes to mind.
The 500 series plug-in's with the switched out vacuum tubes comes to mind.
An old gray beard with an attitude. I don't bite.....sometimes
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
I've never had to get nasty.bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 5:02 pmIf you get a refund then you can't leave negative or neutral feedback. Money is less important than tarnishing his reputationtggzzz wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 4:55 pmFrom what you have said, the seller deliberately misrepresented its operation in two ways: calibrating out the diode, and choosing a current 10% of the PSU's capacity and just under the diode's capacity.
That deserves a rap over the knuckles. At least ask for demand 50% off.
Tarnishing his reputation with a well-constructed thorough complaint is very public spirited - and necessary.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Well I left this as neutral feedback:
Badly modified with a series diode on the (-) terminal and had serious drift problems. Both corrected: removed diode and replaced U1 so not a write off. But clearly barely as described and this would have been known to the seller based on the current test shown. Packaging not great either. Knocking around inside a much larger box with insufficient packaging. 50/50. Should have been marked as spares/repair and untested.
Badly modified with a series diode on the (-) terminal and had serious drift problems. Both corrected: removed diode and replaced U1 so not a write off. But clearly barely as described and this would have been known to the seller based on the current test shown. Packaging not great either. Knocking around inside a much larger box with insufficient packaging. 50/50. Should have been marked as spares/repair and untested.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
I suspect the seller acquired this thing with the wacky 1N4148 mod, which would limit its output to about 300mA, so not a very useful power supply. He must have discovered this. He knew enough to replace the 1N4148, but not enough to realise it was nonsense, or sort out the problem with the op amp, if he could use it long enough to notice that.
He unloaded it on ebay with an essentially dishonest description and photos tailored to skirt around the limitation. A few 1N4148s may have been sacrificed in producing the photo.
Giving him neutral feedback, and scathing but accurate feedback, seems just.
Someone else could have bought this, not technically knowledgeable and just expecting a working power supply, and found it died on them straight away. Then they would have returned it and he would have had more problems.
He unloaded it on ebay with an essentially dishonest description and photos tailored to skirt around the limitation. A few 1N4148s may have been sacrificed in producing the photo.
Giving him neutral feedback, and scathing but accurate feedback, seems just.
Someone else could have bought this, not technically knowledgeable and just expecting a working power supply, and found it died on them straight away. Then they would have returned it and he would have had more problems.
- Cubdriver
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
9118 - that’s after the Danbury, CT plant I used to work at closed, so my hands are clean on that one.bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 3:25 pm Ok so this is now repaired and not drifting. As suspected the voltage amplifier opamp was wonky. It was replaced with a TI UA741CP which is just what I happened to have lying around. I'll calibrate it another day but it's delivering the rated current properly now anyway
The culprit...
IMG_0851.jpeg
-Pat
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Vishay states 2A for 1µs, non-repetitive.
If you put 20A through it then it must be for a very short time, in which case the V=Lleaddi/dt will require an "interesting" voltage
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Having done it before I can confirm that a 1N4148 will take 2A for more than 1µs but only once. And it'll glow orange.
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Here's that fascination with fire coming through again
Who let Murphy in?
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Re: Hooky HP E3610A
I have no grounds to refute this
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
Which datasheet says that?
On-Semi says 1.0A for a 1s pulse and 4.0A for a 1µs pulse - non-repetitive.
Makers have to put out absolute max ratings, but no one would rely on a device being able to do that, and the ratings are quite likely a bit iffy anyway. If you are even approaching it, get something better specified, which in the case of 1N914/6, 1N4148/4448, isn't difficult or expensive. I've seen them used as PSU rectifiers in very low consumption TE, but mostly as signal diodes coming nowhere near their limits.
It was probably shown at 290mA because that was the highest current they could manage without having to remove the cover and replace the dead diode with another 1N4148, again. They didn't even have the sense to bung in a 1N4007.
Re: Hooky HP E3610A
None.
It was a project given to a student by a lecturer I know....find how hard you can push it.
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