#47,756 in Electronics

Reddit mentions of Boost Voltage Converter, DROK 600W 12A Dc Boost Voltage Converter 12-60V to 12-80V Step Up Power Supply Transformer Module Regulator Controller Constant Volt Amp

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Boost Voltage Converter, DROK 600W 12A Dc Boost Voltage Converter 12-60V to 12-80V Step Up Power Supply Transformer Module Regulator Controller Constant Volt Amp. Here are the top ones.

Boost Voltage Converter, DROK 600W 12A Dc Boost Voltage Converter 12-60V to 12-80V Step Up Power Supply Transformer Module Regulator Controller Constant Volt Amp
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    Features:
  • Module Name: 600W boost constant current module, non-isolated
  • Input/output Voltage 1 : 12-60V DC (default range, for wide input voltage range applications)
  • Input/output Voltage 2 : 9-16V DC (for 3 lithium battery and 12V battery) , please do not overrange
  • Input Current: 16A MAX. (over 10A,please enhance heat dissipation,such as a 5cm cooling fan)
  • Output Voltage : 12-80VDC (continuously adjustable),default output: 19VDC
Specs:
Height2.2047244072 Inches
Length2.9921259812 Inches
Number of items1
Size600W CC CV Regulator
Weight0.46 Pounds
Width23.62204722 Inches

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Found 2 comments on Boost Voltage Converter, DROK 600W 12A Dc Boost Voltage Converter 12-60V to 12-80V Step Up Power Supply Transformer Module Regulator Controller Constant Volt Amp:

u/pribnow ยท 4 pointsr/techsupportmacgyver

This guy right here

I have all the 12v rails (for max current) on my PSU going in as an input and the output is dialed in to around 32V. I have a 5 ohm resistor on the green wire in my PSU to override the input from the motherboard so it turns on which is the only other mod I made to the PSU. I was using the PSU to power a 100W led and it worked most of the time but sometimes the PSU would shut itself down and I'd have to flip the switch a couple of times to get it to turn back on (presumably waiting for an residual charge to dissipate?)

u/PayodPanda ยท 1 pointr/AskElectronics

Haha, it's always nice to see if there's a cheaper (and non-fatal) way of doing things. :)

I will be powering an audio amplifier that I got off Amazon. It says that the recommended voltage input is 30V, but it accepts 12V - 36V with a maximum current draw of 8A.

I have tried powering it with my PSU directly (12V, 22A max draw), I have tried powering it with my PSU connected to a CC CV step up transformer converter

The amp seems to be working fine with no audible difference, but I haven't tried turning the volume way up. Maybe I'll hear distortion if I turn the volume too loud and power it with less than 30V? I'm not sure. But I was thinking of powering it with ~15V that I can build with cells in series and parallel them for more capacity.