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current limiting power supply as a load

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erdc

Electrical
Joined
Dec 23, 2005
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Location
US
I am in the process of testing out fuses with different amperages that will be going through them. I connected up a load resistor, and adjust the voltage from a power supply to get the current that I need. A co-worker of mine told me that I could do away with the load resistor, and dial in the current I needed form the current limiting power supply.

I thought a current limiting power supply was to be used when you did not want an excess of current delivered to a load, so as not to damage a test fixture. If I use it in my test set as is (just bare wires and a fuse) it would be a direct short. (we do have a 50A/50Mv shunt in series with the fuses though).

Can this be done, or is it hard on the power supply, especially when it starts to deliver 30 Amps?
 
Theoretically it can be done... I have done it many times.

It does creep me out though, so I do usually put some sort of resistor in the circuit just to cut the supply some slack. It can be any resistor that is a low enough value to allow the desired current and rated with a high enough power.

Then by all means turn the voltage up more than high enough and then creep up your current until Valhalla is reached.

If your supply has a current "control" knob rather than a "current limit" then it is designed to control to a specific current without harm.

A "current limit" supply could just fold back the supply to some arbitrary value when the "limit is reached".
 
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