Has anyone made their own lab power supply out of a PSU?



  • I've been looking into making my own lab bench power supply out of the PSU of an old computer. I've seen a lot of videos on YouTube, but I just wanted to make a thread about it here just in case someone has already done it and can share some experiences.

    The idea came after I figured out it could be nice to easily switch between 3.3, 5 and 12 V power when testing out my Arduino components.


  • Hardware Contributor

    @ronnyandre check out @petewill .
    I have seen one he made but I cant remember if its on his youtube channel or in any of his posts.

    Edit: Lol - here it is: https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/4691/low-voltage-whole-house-power-supply
    Maybe not exactly what you was thinking about but atleast something...



  • Ah, thanks! I have actually seen that video ages ago ๐Ÿ™‚

    I was wondering about what I need for parts in the case of resistors etc.


  • Mod

    I just seen a video talking about a project on kickstarter or similar about a small board that converts an old PSU into a bench power supply


  • Hardware Contributor

    I just bought an ATX breakout board that can be connected to the 24 pin cable from an old power supply. It has bindings post with gnd, 3.3V, 5V and 12V. Very easy (and safe) to use and set up.


  • Hero Member

    @LastSamurai Great idea, just ordered one from ebay


  • Hero Member

    What about this "pico ATX" board. Standard connector, can be powered from a standard 12 supply and deliver 150W... (= a lot of MySensor nodes ;-)) 0_1493905148318_upload-87818f5f-a3e8-4069-b242-fbb1ea066407



  • Well, if you only need static voltages: 12 and 5 you already have and for 3.3 I'd get LM2596 or XM1584 regulators depending on current needs. But then, this would not really be a lab PSU which is by definition adjustable ๐Ÿ˜‰ A common design is the EEVBlog one. Nasty stuff though, I honestly wouldn't do it myself and rather spend the 150EUR...


  • Hero Member

    @pansen Then you would miss the fun and flexibility ๐Ÿ˜‰ . A good combination of cheap available stuff in combination with (adjustable) linear components is giving me everything I need.

    • The ATX fixed voltages (heavily "denoised") for most MySensors and LED stuff (3.3, 5, 12, > 5 Amps)
    • An adjustable (and programmable) linear supply (fed by the ATX) like ยตSupply.


  • I happen to be in the middle of making one right now. I have kind of been working on it slowly in between my weather sensor project. I am using an ATX supply that I pulled from an old computer to give me 12V, 5V and 3.3V, and then I plan on also having a variable supply. For the variable supply I am using a buck converter with a current and voltage meter. I will steal one of the 12 volt legs from the ATX supply to run the buck converter for the variable supply.

    Here is my 3D design for the unit.
    0_1494074261963_upload-5e3fb8da-13f1-4c21-bd35-20b51322da73

    I have the front panel printed, I just have to find the time to print the outer shell and the back panel. Here is what the front panel looks like with some of the components dry fitted.
    0_1494074505657_upload-ee43baef-40bc-4ca5-a7be-28a8c4d6557b

    This is the buck converter that I got from ebay and these are the multi-turn pots that I bought that I will use to replace the small on-board ones that are on the buck converter for voltage and current adjustment. The last thing is the voltage and current meter/display. This is the one that I bought on ebay.

    The most expensive parts were the multi-turn pots. I got mine $2 cheaper per pot than they have them listed for now. I had a hard time finding anything cheap that was panel mountable. As I said, this is a slow work in progress project that I think will be pretty useful once I get it done.



  • Sorry if I'm showing my ignorance here, but I recall the ATX series having both -12v and +12v supply lines, giving 24v differential (Ok, you would need to insulate the -12v against case earth). Why did you opt for the buck/boost rather than an LM317 and current bypass transistors up to ca 23v ? Current requirements?



  • @zboblamont It was an easy connect and go solution rather than having to build something with an LM317 and other components.


  • Mod

    With buck converters you already have voltage and current limitation instead of doing the circuit on your own. ๐Ÿ™‚


  • Hardware Contributor

    I would love to see a project thread about making this...


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