I have two KORAD KD3005P Lab PSU. One of them started failing in a very strange way.
Up to about 1A, everything works fine. For higher current, the output starts 'flickering' in an irregular pattern, the output current (tested with output shorted) was coming and going unpredictably for 0.1 .. 10s seconds. After a while, the output current stayed at 16mA.
I first thought of a bad connector contact or solder joint. I tracked the error down to the two parallel (with 50 mOhm load sharing resistor) 2SD1047 main power transistors. In the failed state, I measured (directly an the transistors pins) VBE of about 9V.
At the working 1A condition, VBE was about 0.78V but the voltage across one of the 50 mOhm load sharing resistor was practically zero.
I concluded, that one of the transistors had completely released it's magic smoke and the other has this strange failure mode.
Is this a common or known failure behavior? How common?
My wild guess is, that it could be caused by the heavy thermal cycling in this application causing stress on the bond wired or something like this.
I now got some replacement D1047 and replaced the bad ones in the failing unit, that now works again.
I then opened the other unit to check whether both transistors are working and found that about 90% of the current went through one of them and 10% to the other. No fair thermal sharing. So I replaced them too. (not that easy to do, mechanically)
I now have 4 removed, old transistors and expected one to be completely dead and one having some kind of changed parameters.
I did a short test with IB 20mA, VCE 1.3V and got about IC 1.6..1.8A for ALL of them!
How is this possible? Did the thermal and mechanical stress on the pins of removing them fix the problem?
Very strange.