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Re: DC-DC converter, AC-DC inverter models


From: Maynard Wright
Subject: Re: DC-DC converter, AC-DC inverter models
Date: Thu, 08 Dec 2016 10:26:30 -0800
User-agent: KMail/4.13.3 (Linux/3.16.0-30-generic; KDE/4.13.3; i686; ; )

On Thursday, December 08, 2016 06:44:08 AM Sergei Steshenko wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> 
> > From: Jasim Ahmed[jahmed] <address@hidden>
> > To: Sergei Steshenko <address@hidden>; "address@hidden"
> > <address@hidden> Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 8:22 AM
> > Subject: RE: DC-DC converter, AC-DC inverter models
> > 
> > Sergei,
> > I was looking for Octave models of those converters. I have used LTSpice.
> > Unfortunately, it is not flexible enough for my purposes (e.g. simulating
> > a
> > battery with an open circuit voltage that varies with age -- the battery
> > is
> > coupled to these converters), and therefore was looking for Octave models
> > that I could then suitably modify.
> > 
> > Jasim
> > 
> > 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Sergei Steshenko [mailto:address@hidden
> > Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2016 10:04 PM
> > To: Jasim Ahmed[jahmed]; address@hidden
> > Subject: Re: DC-DC converter, AC-DC inverter models
> > 
> >>  From: jasim <address@hidden>
> >> 
> >> To: address@hidden
> >> Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 7:30 AM
> >> Subject: DC-DC converter, AC-DC inverter models
> >> 
> >> 
> >> Hello,
> >> I am looking for DC-DC converter and AC-DC inverter models. Does anyone
> >> have any that they can share? Thanks,
> >> 
> >> Jasim
> > 
> > How is it related to Octave ?
> > 
> > If you want circuit simulation, a simple way to start is LTSpice (look it
> > up). Though it's a Windows program, it works under Linux under Wine.
> > 
> > --Sergei.
> > _______________________________________________
> 
> Among other things LTSpice allows to provide stimuli in .wav files. So you
> can have whatever you want time dependent input voltage.
> 
> Besides that, LTSpice is essentially GUI + SPICE, and all SPICE features are
> still accessible through regular SPICE directives to be entered through
> text files. IIRC SPICE allows to specify stimuli as piecewise-linear
> functions, so if it's the case, you case still have time-dependent input
> voltage without .wav files.
> 
> --Sergei.



I use Spice Opus (http://www.spiceopus.si/) as it is available for Linux.

Maynard Wright
> 



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