Reverse Engineering Gopher NPS-1601 Front Panel Circuit | Voltlog #305

In this video I’m gonna show you how I reverse engineered the front panel of the Gopher NPS1601. First I’ll show the method I used for reverse engineering and then I’ll show the results I got This is in my opinion the best power supply you can get in the $50 range and if you would like to know more about this, I did a review in Voltlog #255.

Why did I decide to reverse engineer the front panel of this power supply you might ask? Well it was a topic I had on my todo list ever since I got this unit because I feel like the user interface on this is not as nice as it could be if it had a color TFT display to show more info than what you get on those small 7 segment displays. And I’m not just talking about improving visibility cause you could do that just by using brighter 7-segment displays, I’m talking about showing more data like: calculated wattage or capacity, showing set current and voltage at the same time with actual current and voltage you know the kind of info you get on the more expensive Riden power supply but hopefully in a better color scheme.

Voltlog #254 – Epaper Display Pixel vs Segment Type

Welcome to a new voltlog, today we’ll have a little chat on epaper displays. You probably saw this post I made to my youtube community page a few days ago, it was about my epaper thermometer which suddenly showed the low battery sign and stopped working. I’ve only had this running for 1 month, when I received it, the battery was not connected so I thought it must have been an old battery or a bad one.

Voltlog #39 – 60W Dummy Load Reverse Engineering

In this video we’re discussing the dummy load again but this time I reverse engineered the dummy load schematic and I discuss it’s basic theory of operation. Check the video description for a link to the pdf schematic.