So manufacturer send me a small video. It seems they specifically setup a test and videotaped it for my benefit.
So they went up in my respect, any suggestion they were purposely trying to not understand me is a falsehood.
Following their example, my 6 month old device behaves the same as their current one.
So what do they say, and what does the video show?
They say: "once the device hits CV mode, it stays in CV mode"
(that is pretty much the only thing they write)
It shows:
- Load set to 15V-2A, with Supply set to 18V it draws 2A (so CC is indeed active).
- Going down on V, at 15V current drops to 0A (CV becomes active)
- Going back up above 15V, current goes way past the set 2A to clamp voltage (continued CV mode)
Together with @H.O 's description of the PEL-3000E, re-interpreting the original ET5410 description, it is supposed to be the same protection mode. Protecting the DUT power supply from hanging on in a "brown-out" situation. Stop drawing power and stay in the minimum viable voltage.
Makes some sense, but I believe it is then in error to -stay- in CV even as the DUT recovers.
It means a small transient current spike, or DUT being slow to react to startup, would trigger CV, after which it would stay in CV and draw maximum current.
Now, maybe the DUT can supply the current, it is then holding the voltage after all, but it means this transient effectively canceled the whole set CC, so why bother setting it in the first place.
Which is also hinted at by @H.O first description of the PEL-3000E: "this mode effectively creates a voltage ceiling before the unit operates in CC mode"
Talking about ceiling rather then floor hints it would also go with upward voltage. So likely the PEL-3000E goes back to CC after the voltage rises again.
It would be nice if someone with said device could test this.
Anyway. As mentioned, I keep on this just for the fun of it, will even argue this back to manufacturer, ideally after someone with a PEL-3000E confirms.
But I am not bothered too much by it. With the simple modes working as I intuitively expect, its a pretty good device anyway.