jds wrote:
My first bit of research has been into power supplies, based on the plan of building a period accurate power supply for the TIM board. I’m starting to realise how easy we have it now.... So building a period accurate power supply is very simple from a technical sense, but the parts are getting hard to get.
Yup. I had a similar idea for a PSU for my Commodore 64, having vague memories of my simple high-school power supplies built with just a transformer, diode bridge and perhaps a cap or two, and I too found out that transformers are pretty expensive and not entirely trivial to source these days. (Were they ever cheap? Or was I just used to stuff being expensive?)
So far nobody's given any suggestions that don't involve giving up period accuracy. If you are going to abandon that, certainly a modern PC power supply is workable, but you also need to remember that it's not unusual for these supplies to require a minimum load, as well as needing to have the internal switch shorted. And the smaller they are, the noisier the fan. Personally, I'd go with Garth's idea of just sourcing a smaller and quieter switching PSU. There are plenty out there that provide a half amp of -5V and -12V, 1-2 A of +12V, and 4 A or more of +5V. Examples from AliExpress include
this,
this and
this.
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sm-quad-psu.jpg [ 51.38 KiB | Viewed 2270 times ]
Wall warts can also work: for my C64 I ended up going with
two wall warts, one for the +5 VDC, (which is dead easy to find), and one for the 9 VAC (which also wasn't so hard, and the reason I couldn't just use my bench supply).
And yes, though not applicable to my particular C64 problem, now that I've had some experience I wish I'd spent a bit more and bought at least a two-channel bench supply. I live with an
adjustable wall-wartish thing when I need a second voltage and I can't take +5 from my USB power supply, but I wouldn't use that into something without its own regulator because it's pretty tricky to adjust accurately.