J
John Larkin
Guest
On Sun, 02 Nov 2014 16:21:32 GMT, Jan Panteltje
<pNaonStpealmtje@yahoo.com> wrote:
I am halfway through building a breadboard; I'll post pics. I'm after
extreme broadband high impedance output, which is hard to measure on a
breadboard; Spice lets me graph all sorts of currents and nodes, so
it's the best platform for development.
>But without some theory backing it up how would you know it always works?
I'll have to simulate, and then test, the thing over a range of loads.
>And with the theory you do not need the sliders.
I don't have sufficient theoretical skills to tune this circuit. I'm
not sure if anyone does.
At 30-50 seconds per run, iteration is slow. Worse, the time lag
wrecks my ability to acquire intuition about what's going on.
I'll have to tweak resistors and capacitors, and the cap values are
too big for variable capacitors. And, as noted, it would be hard to
instrument.
Here's the current output when the load voltage steps from about 0.5
to 3 volts.
>https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/53724080/Circuits/Current_Sources/Hysterical_A1.jpg
I want it as flat as possible.
The fast ripple is the basic 1.5 MHz switcher frequency. The various
whoopie-doos are from loop dynamics and the chain of progressively
smaller, bias-tee-like damped inductors between the switcher and the
load. The constant-current hysterical switcher is, natively, about 4
or so orders of magnitude too slow for my application.
Everything interacts with everything else; it's like tuning a big LC
filter by hand, never a fun thing to do. Spice helps me acquire at
least some instincts for tuning. Maybe I can fix the cap values and
tune only resistors on the breadboard.
Rob, one of my guys, has a fierce Linux computer just for sims and
FPGA compiles, and he knows how to do automatic iterative parts value
tweaking in a loop around Spice. Maybe he can set up the problem and
run it for a couple of days or weeks.
I could probably step each of the six most important values, maybe 4
steps each, and pick the best waveform. That would be 4096 sims, about
60 hours of computing on my PC.
--
John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
<pNaonStpealmtje@yahoo.com> wrote:
On a sunny day (Sun, 02 Nov 2014 08:00:36 -0800) it happened John Larkin
jlarkin@highlandtechnology.com> wrote in
0nkc5aljhec5r36ptkoaqbt0a48ud2j5vo@4ax.com>:
On Sun, 02 Nov 2014 07:25:49 -0800, Joerg <news@analogconsultants.com
wrote:
Folks,
Need to spiff up my simulation speeds here. IIRC Mike Engelhardt stated
that the Intel i7 is a really good processor for LTSPice. According to
this it looks like the 4790 is the fastest of the bunch:
http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/processors/core/core-i7-processor.html
So, what do thee say, is the computer in the Costco link below a good
deal for LTSpice purposes?
http://www.costco.com/Dell-XPS-8700-Desktop-%7c-Intel-Core-i7-%7c-1GB-Graphics-%7c-Windows-7-Professional.product.100131208.html
It's also available without MS-Office Home & Student 2013 for $100 less
but I found that OpenOffice isn't 100% compatible in the Excel area so
that sounds like an ok deal. My hope is that it can drive two 27"
monitors but I guess I can always add in another graphics card if not.
Reason I am looking at these is that I absolutely positively do not want
any computer with Windows 8 in here and unfortunately that's what many
others come with.
I have spent too many hours this weekend tweaking the transient
response of a semi-hysteretic (we call it "hysterical") switchmode
constant-current source. There are about 8 interacting knobs to turn.
At 30 seconds per run, understanding the interactions is impossible.
I want sliders on each of the part values, and I want to see the
waveforms change as I move the sliders, like they were trimpots on a
breadboard and I was looking at a scope. I need maybe 500 times the
compute power that I have now.
Mike should code LT Spice to execute on a high-end video card.
Maybe building the real thing with some pots?
I am halfway through building a breadboard; I'll post pics. I'm after
extreme broadband high impedance output, which is hard to measure on a
breadboard; Spice lets me graph all sorts of currents and nodes, so
it's the best platform for development.
>But without some theory backing it up how would you know it always works?
I'll have to simulate, and then test, the thing over a range of loads.
>And with the theory you do not need the sliders.
I don't have sufficient theoretical skills to tune this circuit. I'm
not sure if anyone does.
I do not see the need for insane speeds, I have used LTspice more than often
the last few days, running on an old Duron 950, fast enough.
maybe you guys are doing something wrong?
At 30-50 seconds per run, iteration is slow. Worse, the time lag
wrecks my ability to acquire intuition about what's going on.
And it is always an approximation, build the real thing too,
needed tweaking with resistors in series, that is analog,
got some nice 25 turn Bourns trimpots from ebay.....
I'll have to tweak resistors and capacitors, and the cap values are
too big for variable capacitors. And, as noted, it would be hard to
instrument.
Here's the current output when the load voltage steps from about 0.5
to 3 volts.
>https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/53724080/Circuits/Current_Sources/Hysterical_A1.jpg
I want it as flat as possible.
The fast ripple is the basic 1.5 MHz switcher frequency. The various
whoopie-doos are from loop dynamics and the chain of progressively
smaller, bias-tee-like damped inductors between the switcher and the
load. The constant-current hysterical switcher is, natively, about 4
or so orders of magnitude too slow for my application.
Everything interacts with everything else; it's like tuning a big LC
filter by hand, never a fun thing to do. Spice helps me acquire at
least some instincts for tuning. Maybe I can fix the cap values and
tune only resistors on the breadboard.
Rob, one of my guys, has a fierce Linux computer just for sims and
FPGA compiles, and he knows how to do automatic iterative parts value
tweaking in a loop around Spice. Maybe he can set up the problem and
run it for a couple of days or weeks.
I could probably step each of the six most important values, maybe 4
steps each, and pick the best waveform. That would be 4096 sims, about
60 hours of computing on my PC.
--
John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com