Comment on New Raspberry Pi 5 comes with PCIe 2.0 x1 interface and power button
InvertedParallax@lemm.ee 1 year agoIt’s really not, you have a buck reg on board already, it’s just the peripherals that need 5v and for a lot of that you can use linear regs.
anlumo@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Yeah there’s a buck regulator on board, but the caps for it are far too tiny for 48V. The ones you need are much bigger.
InvertedParallax@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Not… really. Remember the voltage rating increases but the capacitance itself can reduce so the dielectric just increases in size but shrinks in layers. Same energy, but since it’s cv^2 you can actually reduce capacitance more.
You’re talking about the bulk input tanks which need to be 100v, the rest of them past the inductor should be the same.
All thus being said, nobody will do this, not for a good reason, the guys who do power circuits think differently than the guys who do logic and their state space equations say it’s not safe, which would be true for reactive loads but for this kind of logic it’s mostly resistive with some obnoxious parasitic inductance and nasty switching noise that the supply caps would filter.
This is changing with the younger generation who don’t have those prejudices.