Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The power supply only delivers 1 amp when the receiving item "wants" 1 amp. If it "wants" 2 amp, the resistance of the receiving item is too small and the voltage out of the power supply drops and the current reduces. It is a form of overload protection. You can see the black thing with 4 legs. It is an optocoupler and when the LED on the output stage of the power supply goes dim, the circuitry reduces the amount of time the transformer receives pulses and the whole circuitry starts to close-down. It's called self-preservation.
I don't think that the opto-isolator does that. The opto-isolator tells the input to stop or slow down when the output voltage is high enough.
Then I think I know this power supply. Most of the parts are used near their maximum rating. The transformer is used at the edge of core saturation. This type of PWM oscillator uses core saturation to end a cycle.Nothing on the bottom side.
How are you measuring the 130 mA? If you just connect an ammeter to the power supply, you are shorting it out and it might provide far less than its rated current. You need some load that takes 1 A at 5 V, such as a 5 Ω resistor, to test that the power supply can supply the rated current.This circuit is built to provide 1A output but it provide only 130mA so I guess there might be a piece is a bottle neck. Can you tell me how to test to find the bottle neck?
![]()
No there are many bottle necks.I guess there might be a piece is a bottle neck.