Burgerman wrote:Also for testing motors, other electronics, as a general bench power supply. As I said, I am currently using mine to nickel plate stuff at 3V... And to run a diesel glowplug as a heater to warm the plating solution at 10V.
Lots of uses for the shirley psu. I keep finding more. The other day a guy was working on my AC unit. He has one of those vests that pumps cool water around the torso to help him stay cool in the summer heat.(he's up in attics a lot) Anyway, he mentioned he thought his water pump for his vest had died. I told him to go grab it. Specs on the pump said 12v and 0.5A. So I set the shirley psu to those specs, took a bit of wire and connected the pump to the psu. It ran fine! So then we checked his battery pack for it with a multimeter (probably should have done that first) and confirmed his battery pack and charger for it were toast.
Also, my neighbor had a car in her garage for three months. She goes to start it and of course it wouldn't turn over cause the battery was discharged. So I set the shirley psu to 14.4v and max amps, and connected it to the car's battery. Gave it some time, and boom the car started right up!
There are many use cases, ones you haven't even thought of. The shirly psu isn't very big and I find it to be a great tool to have along with the rest of my equipment.