As a crude approximation, the reverse leakage of an ordinary silicon rectifier at room temp will typically be about 9 orders of magnitude below the forward current rating. So, a 100A rectifier can be expected to have a leakage current of perhaps 100nA. You may see larger numbers on datasheets, but those are generally sandbagged so that the manufacturer doesn't have to spend the money on actually testing that parameter.

Now, if you're still using seleniums or copper-oxide rectifiers, I might worry about the reverse leakage...otherwise, battery self-discharge will dominate by large factors.

--Cheers
Tom
-- 
Prof. Thomas H. Lee
Allen Ctr., Rm. 205
350 Jane Stanford Way
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-4070
http://www-smirc.stanford.edu
On 9/5/2022 22:22, Brian Clarke wrote:

Not a good idea, Bob.

 

Some batteries, particularly lead-acid, see the pulsing DC as charge-discharge cycles, shortening their lives. Diodes do not have infinite reverse resistance; so, leaving a battery connected to a transformer + rectifier combo will discharge the battery a bit faster than shelf life.

If you don’t use a battery or regulator to smooth out the pulses, your outgoing radio signal will be modulated with 100 Hz or 120 Hz noise.

 

73 de Brian, VK2GCE

 

From: Bob kb8tq [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, 6 September 2022 1:54 PM
To: Brian Clarke
Cc: Glenn Little WB4UIV; ARC-5
Subject: Re: [ARC5] 24vdc power

 

Hi

 

If this is a basic “no regulation” supply ( = transformer driving diodes into a load + 

(maybe) a cap …) the addition of a diode to isolate this or that does nothing useful. 

 

Bob

 


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