On Fri, Mar 3, 2023 at 7:07 AM Jeffrey Walton <noloa...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> I don't think the part about a generator is a good idea. Generators
> are usually wildly out of spec for Total Harmonic Distortion (THD). A
> generator under load can easily reach 15% to 20% THD. Meanwhile,
> electronics usually expect 3% THD or less. So you want the signal
> conditioned, and not passing directly through to the electronics.
>
> Jeff

I have ran computers on wild generators for several days and no issues.

The switching power supplies are very good at taking just about any
power with a reasonable voltage and just working.   They take the
input voltages and convert to DC pulses and really don't care much
about the input so long as the HZ is above the rated HZ (usually 50
for non-US), and the voltage is not really high or really low.

The only real issue is if the input voltage is significantly low and
the output power is a high percentage of rated and the lower input
voltage causes current draws that are at the high end of design.

The switching power supply really eliminates a lot of the input power
requirements (in computers).

If the electronics do not have a switching power supply then linear
power supplies are a lot less forgiving.  In a linear power supply the
transformer is first, in a switching the transformer is after the DC
pulses so really does not care about wide frequency variations and
voltage variations nearly as much.
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