larya wrote:
> Greetings...
> I have taken the power supply out of a computer...
> Power supply model number.. IBP-38A
> Does anyone know how to start it...
> The computer's on / off switch was / is on the front panel and the
> connecting wire goes to the mother board... I still have the mother
> board and have considered doing a board trace to track the wire to the
> power supply....
> However to save me some time would anyone know were the start circuit
> is?..
> Larry ve3fxq
The front switch doesn't feed the power supply directly. The
signal is conditioned by motherboard logic. One of the necessary
functions carried out by the logic, is a four second delay before
shutting off the computer (to prevent accidents). The four second
delay is context sensitive as well, so the conditioning of the
front switch contact closure, depends on whether you're in
the BIOS or the OS etc.
X-------------- Motherboard ------ PS_ON# --------- ATX PSU
Logic
Front Chip
Switch
(Momentary) (latches signal)
The PS_ON# signal controls the soft switching of an ATX
power supply. That is a logic signal on the main cable.
The "#" in the signal name, means the signal is active low.
You ground the PS_ON# signal, to turn on the supply. "Conor"
and "GlowingBlueMist" have already suggested connecting PS_ON#
to an adjacent COM (ground) pin, to turn on the supply and make
the fan spin.
The 20 and 24 pin power connectors have similar pinout. The 24
pin connector is just a 20 pin, with four redundant pins added
to the end of it.
You can see how a 20 pin, is a subset of a 24 pin, here.
http://www.playtool.com/pages/psuconnectors/20in24.jpg
There are pinout tables available in the article as well,
so you can compare a 24 pin to a 20 pin.
http://www.playtool.com/pages/psucon...onnectors.html
Paul