Hello,
I have a question. Is either side
of the 250VDC supply on the boat tied
to the ground plate? If so you would
need to use an isolating transformer.
If the end user is protected from
the 240VDC and it's not grounded,
which I will assume for the moment
is the case. I might try an auto
transformer to buck the line voltage
down to where it needs to be, then
follow that with a choke input full
wave rectifier and smoothing capacitor.
Three phase would be best because the
power factor would be very good and
the ripple filtering capacitor could
be small.
If the branch circuit is sized properly,
there is nothing to prevent you from
running a single phase capacitor input
supply after the auto transformer.
A choke input supply would still be better.
But either would violate IEC standards,
so I wouldn't try to sell one of those
in the EU.
If you build any power supply with a 60A
250VDC output please use appropriately
rated fuses on both input and output
(This means DC rated fuses on the output.)
Include a disconnect switch to lock out
the AC line feeding the supply too. Wire
wound bleeder resistors with a 50% de rating
factor across the caps are also a must as
is a proper enclosure. A device to short
the output when the cover is removed isn't a
bad idea either.
I'd also want a GFI built-in to the supply
since it's unisolated and used on a boat.
Dockside power may not have this protection.
Most of my work is with 480-600 VAC input
switch mode power supplies with output
power from 10KW and up. Building a switching
power supply with a 250VDC 60A output is
pretty close to some previous designs that
I've worked on. They usually began with a
three phase choke input rectifier. If a single
phase input was required a boost converter
type power factor corrector was employed.
I hope this rambling has been of some help
Best regards,
csharp