



How much of a load is required? Wouldn't the 5V used to power the Rambo qualify as a load?Polygonhell wrote:A short word of warning on replacing the PSU, not all ATX power supplies work well as power supplies for printers, some contain safety circuits that require a load on the 5V line before delivering significant current to the 12V line.
Unfortunately it's basically impossible to tell if a PSU has the circuit unless you try it.
Personally I would replace it with a none ATX 12V PSU unless you can get a referral of a known to work PSU.
Usually over an amp is needed on the +5v rail to stabilize the power supply for the ones that need it. 10 ohm 10 watt resistors from radio shack are a common recomendation, just tie the ceramic brick to the PSU case for passive cooling.dpmacri wrote:How much of a load is required? Wouldn't the 5V used to power the Rambo qualify as a load?Polygonhell wrote:A short word of warning on replacing the PSU, not all ATX power supplies work well as power supplies for printers, some contain safety circuits that require a load on the 5V line before delivering significant current to the 12V line.
Unfortunately it's basically impossible to tell if a PSU has the circuit unless you try it.
Personally I would replace it with a none ATX 12V PSU unless you can get a referral of a known to work PSU.
Good point Lordbinky, those suckers would get mighty toasty warm.lordbinky wrote:Usually over an amp is needed on the +5v rail to stabilize the power supply for the ones that need it. 10 ohm 10 watt resistors from radio shack are a common recomendation, just tie the ceramic brick to the PSU case for passive cooling.dpmacri wrote:How much of a load is required? Wouldn't the 5V used to power the Rambo qualify as a load?Polygonhell wrote:A short word of warning on replacing the PSU, not all ATX power supplies work well as power supplies for printers, some contain safety circuits that require a load on the 5V line before delivering significant current to the 12V line.
Unfortunately it's basically impossible to tell if a PSU has the circuit unless you try it.
Personally I would replace it with a none ATX 12V PSU unless you can get a referral of a known to work PSU.
If you tie that rail with a 10 ohm resistor, you're giving it an extremely easy return path. It will waste loads of electricity.lordbinky wrote: Usually over an amp is needed on the +5v rail to stabilize the power supply for the ones that need it. 10 ohm 10 watt resistors from radio shack are a common recomendation, just tie the ceramic brick to the PSU case for passive cooling.
What would be a better alternative? It would be nice to power something on the Rostock to load the 5V rail. Any suggestions?626Pilot wrote:If you tie that rail with a 10 ohm resistor, you're giving it an extremely easy return path. It will waste loads of electricity.lordbinky wrote: Usually over an amp is needed on the +5v rail to stabilize the power supply for the ones that need it. 10 ohm 10 watt resistors from radio shack are a common recomendation, just tie the ceramic brick to the PSU case for passive cooling.
LOTS of LED accent lights! And put the whole thing on a turntable!Eaglezsoar wrote:
What would be a better alternative? It would be nice to power something on the Rostock to load the 5V rail. Any suggestions?
My Heatware!.Flateric wrote: Black ABS, weak part, bizzare holes, bad layer adhesion, loss of details. Loss of sanity.