Received this unit yesterday, and curious if anybody has any experience with these..?
Was looking for a new programable PS with a current ability up to 10A as it's far from ideal to put my two individual Korad linear PSUs (KA3003P & KD3005P) into parallel.
I was looking into either a barebone switchmode AC to DC module, and hooking it up with a display DC controller, or getting one of these cheaper OEM bench PSU that are coming out of China in bulk at relatively low prices and seem quite popular amongst EEVblog-users.
Some of the criteria that I was prioritizing' which could be a hurdle to obtain when pursuing a programable switchmode power supply in the very lower-end price bracket
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* Graphical interface (important) no 7-segment display, I wanna be able to see my settings & secondary adjustments, and constantly maintain an overview of my V/A values and also the adjustments.. -
http://tinyurl.com/3yeyvscv* Translucent buttons to highlight when things & settings are active.
* Rotary clickable interface dial for control of segments/digits.
* Protruding binding posts, perhaps with cable feed-thru-holes - i'm not a fan of the 4mm safety input EU jacks, that I got on one of my Korads (KD3005P).
* Temp fan control, in the small hope it's done well, and the fan will stay off when there is no heavy drain. (important)
* Relative small & compact, and easy to move around and put away and take advantage of one of the main benefits of SMPS tech.
* Front on/off AC switch, so it doesn't stay in some semi-standby mode with a soft sw shutdown, and waste electricity.
* Relative low price = a no-name OEM unit
* Decent 4mm binding posts that deliver firm tight fit with different kinds of 4mm banana jacks, - quite vital with high-current that the connection is loyal, not flimsy.
Secondaries - not that relevant.
* Western stock, so it doesn't take months to arrive but in a few days. (though a minor thing' as often it is simply not possible)
* PC /RS232 interface for fx PC software and perhaps third-party interface ability.
With these quite specific criteria, most of the cheaper PSU models to 50 to 65 bucks (incl. 25%EUVAT) were out of the picture.
I stumped upon a model under the mouthful-name "KUAIQU" that matches many of the criteria that I was prioritizing, and the backland even had stock in Europe (Poland or Spain inventory) so took a chance on that unit - it arrived yesterday (Thursday) to DK from Poland - an order made on Sunday, so merely around 4 days, impressive delivery time for items with stock in Europe.
The price with delivery was around 80 Euro/86US in total (incl a 7 euro shipping fee from PL to DK), so quite a bit more than the cheapest versions of these Chinese 30v/10A SMPS's, but the fast delivery is a joy - as otherwise, it would have taken a month or two, as China is more less closed down for most of the month with their Lunar New Year holiday.... bummer, got a newly released NUMB12-22W RGB lazing microarray from Nichia on the backburner that sadly wasn't shipped before China went down under.
First impressions of the bench KUAIQU-SMPS 32v/10A are positive, it weighs around 1.35kg (13x22x12cm) and the outer build is stamped sheet metal all around, with a plastic front.(like most units) the fan seems temperature-smart based and sofar doesn't turn on at all even when pumping above 10A and over 100W into these 50W & 100W blocked yellow resistors but it's only for like 20 to 30 seconds until the resistors simply get too hot.
Will try the 420W electronic East tester sink-load tomorrow on this 325Watt switching supply, so I at least can hear how the fan sounds (if it works) but the OEM vendor does emphasize on their homepage that it's a "smart fan" in this new series, though it likely says more about the generally low standard of this OEM NP-vendor's massive portfolio of cheap Chinese SMPS's if the norm is a steady always-on fan.