Maybe someone can help me out here?
I've been looking at the rectifier design using the four 1N4007 diodes and the caps. In Merlin's book on power supplies he calls the caps 'slugging caps' rather than 'snubbing caps'.
Snubbing implies burning energy off as heat, whereas slugging capacitors only spread the energy out, transferring it to lower frequencies.
I'm interested in using the fast recovery RGP10M diodes in place of the 1N4007s as I expect the transients (switching noise) will be quieter. Frustratingly, I read here (somewhere!) that slugging caps shouldn't be used with the superfast switching diodes because they interfere with their operation, but without any explanation of how or why. So I breadboarded the rectifier circuit, as a full wave bridge, and went hunting for the transients.
1673121232576.jpg
Merlin's oscillogram on page 49 shows a comparison between 1n4007s without a cap, with a slugging cap and with a snubber. The slugging cap added has a much longer "sine-like" tail which lasts for about 160 microseconds whereas both the diode without and cap and with a snubber show a much shorter, spikier transient - each less than 10 microseconds long.
I tried to replicate his experiment but unwittingly, I had the horizontal scale set at 5ms and Merlin had his at 20us. So I have to run the experiment again in any case, and unsurprisingly, the scope traces I saved don't appear to show the transients in any detail.
SDS00018.jpg
SDS00019.jpg
SDS00020.jpg
SDS00021.jpg
I'm assuming then, I missed the transients on this occasion but I am really not clear why the slugging caps would not work fine with the faster diodes. Does it have something to do with capacitor timing? Does it affect the current that can be delivered? Do these things contribute to a "buzzing" noted elsewhere? By buzzing, are we talking about oscillation?
The upshot of all this, is that I don't intend to use the slugging caps with the RGP10M diodes, but still, I would like to understand why people say the caps are a bad idea.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.