DIGIKEY IS SLOW TO FILL MY PARTS ORDER DUE TO HEAVY VOLUME
As the parts have not yet been shipped, they will not arrive by midweek as I had expected. I took the time to document the regulator and explain some of its function.
REGULATOR HAS AN SMS CARD TO REGULATE THE VOLTAGE PLUS OTHER PARTS
The regulator has six IBM type 108 germanium power transistors each on a large heat sink, a circuit breaker, a few other parts and then two SMS cards. One card simply detects when the output voltage is above a trigger threshold, so that it can short the output to cause the circuit breaker to trip. The other is the logic that drives the six power transistors so that the current they are passing will produce a 6V voltage drop over the load.
The schematic for the regulator includes all the above parts. In addition, it is drawn with the IBM conventions where they show electron flow from the top to the bottom, upside down from the usual orientation in drawing circuits that considers current to flow from positive to negative. IBM also draws transistors in a non-standard way.
DIFFERENTIAL/COMPARATOR PORTION OF THE CIRCUIT
The two transistors above have their emitters connected through an emitter resistor. This biases the voltage needed on the base of the transistor to cause it to conduct - the more current through the pair of transistors, the higher the voltage drop on R5 which means that the base needs to be more negative to enter the conduction region.
The right transistor feeds a bias current to the power transistor driver, based on the voltage seen across the output terminals of the regulator. It is trimmed by a potentiometer to produce the 6V voltage drop on the load. The left transistor drives the amplifier based on a fixed voltage from a Zener diode.
If the voltage across the output dips below 6V, the right transistor has less current flow or cuts off, lowering the total current through the emitter resistor R5. This causes the left transistor to conduct more heavily. The left transistor current is amplified and drives the power transistors to increase current leading to restoration of the output voltage.
If the voltage across the load bumps over 6V, the right transistor conducts more heavily, which increases the emitter resistor R5 voltage drop. That lowers the conduction of the left transistor, the amplifier has a lower output and therefore the power transistors lower the current to the load until the voltage drop restores to 6V.
AMPLIFIER PORTION OF THE CIRCUIT
The differential circuit left transistor output current is fed into the base of transistor T3. As the differential circuit requests more power, transistor T3 conducts more heavily. Its output feeds the base of transistor T4, adding further gain. T4 delivers more current from the - input rail to the base of transistor T6, again being amplified to pass current from the - rail to the bases of the six power transistors.
POWER PORTION OF THE CIRCUIT
Six IBM type 108 transistors operate in parallel to deliver the current requirements of this regulator. It is capable of delivering 24A across the load. The transistors have emitter resistors that cause these to balance the load across the six. As a transistor delivers more current, the voltage drop on its emitter resistor rises so that the voltage difference at the base lowers to decrease conduction.
OVERVOLTAGE PROTECTION CARD
A differential pair of transistors T2 and T3 compare the fixed voltage of a Zener diode on the left with a fraction of the actual output voltage delivered to the right transistor through an adjustable potentiometer. When the voltage on the right transistor gets high enough, the right transistor conducts enough to reach the trigger voltage level for the silicon controlled rectifier (SCR) SCR4. Once triggered the SCR stays in conduction until power is removed. As SCR4 conducts, it delivers the trigger voltage to SCR46, which shorts the entire output of the regulator.
This circuit will force the circuit breaker to trip on the regulator. It fires in a few tens of microseconds, protecting the logic components in the 1130 from damage if the voltage is too high. The potentiometer is set to a protective target, e.g. 6.8V, where the card will cut off the output voltage.






