Friday 5 May 2017

power - Creating a high-current bus on a PCB


I'm planning a custom power-distribution / fuse-board for in-car application, but that requires carrying high currents (50A+ @12v*) on a PCB trace. Since I'd like to keep the board cost, and physical size down, can anyone suggest efficient (as in easy & inexpensive) methods for creating a power bus on a PCB?



Feed in would be from a chunky copper cable, most likely with a screw-terminal tag on the end.


My thoughts so far:



  • Thick trace with thick coat of solder

  • Same but with some thick copper wire soldered to it

  • Same, but use a single strip of stripboard

  • A length of copper or aluminium, either attached with screws through holes in the trace, or soldered down (obviously not soldering aluminium down!)


These are all OK but require special effort to populate the board, whereas something available off-the-shelf would make life easier.


Edit to add more info: The basic layout will be a bus up the board, with feeds off for each item, each of which may draw <30A (but most of them are <10A), so per-connection there can be a little thermal relief to make life easier.



* = Average of maybe 30-40A if the cooling fan's running and all the lights are on, ~10A if not, potentially 100A max although more headroom is better.




No comments:

Post a Comment

arduino - Can I use TI&#39;s cc2541 BLE as micro controller to perform operations/ processing instead of ATmega328P AU to save cost?

I am using arduino pro mini (which contains Atmega328p AU ) along with cc2541(HM-10) to process and transfer data over BLE to smartphone. I...