|
|
|
|
|
by f1shy
329 days ago
|
|
No it will not. Have done it thousands of times. No no no. You can downvote all that you want, but you will still be wrong. It will happen nothing. Period. If you do not know about it, educate yourself before downvoting and commenting about fuses. Because of all these supplies work with transistors they do not act as a load to the other. Is like if the 2 had a diode in the output (in fact they do have one, but not directly in the output). This is my typical experience in HN lately, is getting full of people with absolutely no idea what they talk about, and are constantly downvoting good comments. |
|
This is utter nonsense, Ohm's law doesn't magically stop working with a transistor. I do know about this, I've designed power supplies and USB devices, and I've destroyed more than a few components accidentally by connecting two switching supplies together. Yes, there will be current flowing, and yes, sometimes a fuse or breaker will trip, I have experienced this many times, and just because you haven't doesn't mean it doesn't happen.
>Is like if the 2 had a diode in the output (in fact they do have one, but not directly in the output)
Sounds like you're referring to either ESD protection diodes, or flyback diodes, neither of which do anything in the case of two similar but unmatched power supplies.
I'd advise you to get a degree in engineering (as I have), or do some serious studying, as this kind of uninformed discussion is not productive or helpful to anyone, it's just noise.