| Antec EarthWatts 500 W Power Supply Review | |
| By Gabriel Torres on February 19, 2008 | Page 3 of 9 |
Primary Analysis
We also need to know under which temperature the component manufacturer measured the component maximum current (this piece of information is also found on the component databook). The higher the temperature, the lower current semiconductors can deliver. Currents given at temperatures lower than 50º C are no good, as temperatures below that don’t reflect the power supply real working conditions. Keep in mind that this doesn’t mean that the power supply will deliver the maximum current rated for each component as the maximum power the power supply can deliver depends on other components used – like the transformer, coils, capacitors, the PCB layout, the wire gauge and even the width of the printed circuit board traces – not only on the specs of the main components we are going to analyze. For a better understanding of what we are talking here, please read our Anatomy of Switching Power Supplies tutorial. This power supply uses one GBU806 rectifying bridge on its primary stage, which can deliver up to 8 A (rated at 100º C). The active PFC circuit from this power supply uses two FQH18N50V2 power MOSFET transistors, which are capable of delivering up to 20 A at 25º C or 12.7 at 100º C in continuous mode or up to 80 A in pulse mode. On the switching section other two FQH18N50V2 power MOSFET transistors in two-transistor forward configuration are used.
This power supply uses a CM6800 integrated circuit on its primary, which is a very popular active PFC and PWM controller combo. It is located on a small printed circuit board shown on Figure 10.
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