Part 1 of a new design series on developing an isolated USB Lab Power Supply.
Convert your USB port into an isolated lab type power supply.
This is just the introduction announcing the intention and showing off some old concept prototypes. The design videos will follow as Dave develops them.
The finished project is planned to look quite different to the prototypes.
Convert your USB port into an isolated lab type power supply.
This is just the introduction announcing the intention and showing off some old concept prototypes. The design videos will follow as Dave develops them.
The finished project is planned to look quite different to the prototypes.
Hi I Wanted to give everyone a bit of a heads up on a new series I'm stting New Design series. It's my power supply spin-off I've been mentoring numerous times. Uh, in the previous Bench uh, battery Powered Bench Power Supply video series and on the Forum and Uh Twitter and various other places. I've mentioned that um I'm going to be working on this bit of a spin-off uh project.
In fact, it actually predates the Um bench uh, battery powered uh Power Supply by a long time. So I'm going to start on that so this will be part one. There won't be any detailed technical info in here I Just wanted to uh, show you what I'm actually going to do now what it is is um I uh back in 2009 also I Had the thought that it'd be nice to have a little power supply you could take with you and work on those little projects or hacks or whatever you're doing. You know, out in the field, wherever you are with your laptop, right? right? you're working on a microcontroller project.
You need the power thing. You got your laptop with you, but you don't have a little bench power supply you can take with you and I thought, well, why don't you convert a USB port into a power supply And it seemed like a really good idea and you know a lot of people do that. A lot of people have done it. You know, they hook uh 3.3 volt Regulators directly onto the Uh USB connector and that's fine and dandy.
But I Wanted a proper variable power supply with knobs and a current voltage readout and things like that and I knew it wasn't going to be high power. You know it's limited to the 2.5 Watts on the USB port, but hey, 2 and 1 half wats can power. You know a decent amount of projects these days, especially a lot of the Um stuff I'm working on. it's it's more than enough.
So I thought I'll do a USB Lab Power Supply and that's what I started on and Tada USB Lab Power Power supply the micro Supply USB Lab Power Supply. It's got voltage and current readouts. It's got dual knobs on it USB input and the outputs and sorry, don't get all excited. this is not a finished product.
it's one of my prototypes and I'll show you some of the others. Uh, well, one of the others, um, you'll I uh designed this one back in 2009. It was a Uh designed to if it looks very similar to my microcurrent. It's no surprise cuz it was designed around the same time.
Hence I designed it into the same case and things like that. It's got the same red front panel and it's got the Uh binding posts on the top and things like that. so that was also a dual readout with the buttons. That was my first one.
This is another more modern one. This was done in 2010 so it's been sitting around for um, quite some time and I'll plug it in and actually uh, show you what's going on here. Here we go. Got my USB cable and uh, it plugs in and uh yeah, you can just adjust the voltage there.
it's it. It switches between the Uh set voltage and the actual red voltage. so if you turn it down in 50 Molt steps, there it is. It drops down and uh, then it reads the and same thing with the current as well. You can chuse your constant Uh Set current and then it actually switches back and measures the Um Set current. Very simple and it's uh, isolated as well so you can put them in Uh series and create split supplies and things like that. Very handy, but like I said, not a finished design. I was never really happy with uh, you know either of these, the direction they going, the uh price of them, uh, some component selection, some logistic issues I thought it was too big to slip into a notebook carry case and you know stuff like that.
So I've decided that recently I will redesign it from scratch and I'll start a new series on how I'm going to design a USB Lab power supply. So I hope you enjoy it I hope you uh, follow along and uh, no, I'm not going to stop work on the Uh battery powered bench power supply that's still ongoing. Um, trust me. I've got a few uh, major steps to that.
I got relay out the board before I can do another video and stuff like that so that will be uh, going on at the same time so that will eventually happen. Don't worry. hasn't been abandoned. Um, but I'm going to do this one as well.
It's pretty, uh, simple. nothing complex. so this one might actually come out before as a as a kit. I plan on selling this thing.
Um, so it should. Uh, because it's uh, simple. It should come out, um, sooner than the battery powered bench power supply. Anyway, it should be fun.
A USB Lab Power Supply. Let me know in the comments on the Forum wherever if you think this is a neat idea, do you want one, and uh, what features you would like to see in it, but uh, I've already got an idea of how of what features it's going to have, how it's going to be packaged, everything else. So um, I'm basically going to follow that design. but I'm Keen to hear people's input on the concept and the idea of a USB uh power supply like this one Lab Power Supply and you know maximum voltage, maximum carrent, and interface and things like that so should be a fun and interesting project.
Hope you follow along. Catch you next time.
Hilarious seeing you 10 years ago now, and how uncomfortable you were on camera, and today you are far better on the camera.
Hey Dave, now with usb c type capabilities about, how about a spin on this one?
Looks very young here….. You're getting 👵
I really like this idea. Could you perhaps use USB-C since it has a higher power rating and is quickly becoming a "normal" connection?
its 2/18/2019 and id love one also!!! pretty neat!
I would love a USB power supply that could scale to 90v, 3mAh
Looks great, very practical. I would love to have one.
Молодец, фокус не на себе а на оборудовании, лайк.
Непривычно как-то, Давид моложе выглядит.
id buy this in kit form
i would love to have one of them
It's 3 years later and I want one.
that would be very handy
I actually got a recent design that combined the USB and batteries into one unit – USB charges the batteries, and batteries powers a boost converter capable of at most 36V at 2A. I called that MTD295A (5 cells, there was 3 designs differ in only the amount of Li-Ion cells used: 295A with 5 cells, 299A with 9 cells and 292B with 12 cells).
Just like one of those cute pocket dso's you ripped apart.
He's limiting to 2.5W or 5V @ 500mA. Would be cool if this would detect standard downstream port vs charging downstream port. This way if the "USB Port" can supply 1.5A, the uSupply would be able to use it.
Really its "powerxpress"
I would live to have a USB powered power supply that puts out 24volts. The "power express" puts out 24volts to power instruments that run on 4-20ma loop power. It also has a hart modem built I but it would be happy with 24 volts out of the USB port.
how do you make a voltage readout? i am trying to make my own but i need a volt read out. plz help
I designed a similar PSU (PPS6W) at sangelectronics a while ago and I thought this video was interesting. I also started like yours but did not like the look of it, so I stick to the USB controllable instead.
pretty cool!
Ditch the knobs and LED's and control/monitor it via software interface!
Hi, I'm a huge fan and I absolutely love your teardown tuesdays, (request: spellman/Glassman high voltage supplys.) I'm a mere lowly undergrad but am headed into EE for RF and Power Engineering because I love my Black-Magic. Anywho, have you considered incorporating a little Boost Converter into your next USB-PSU? Then you could potentially leverage that 2-watts for 12, 13.8, 15 etc variable voltages! That'd be cool to see.
Can you make charge mobile phones