Most power supplys that I have messed with have a voltage adjustment screw (A 10 or 20 turn pot). You can turn the output voltage down or up checking with a voltmeter.
Its usually located near the output wire connection terminals.
thank you for your message
70V is the max voltage , you can’t let it more than 70V
for 1500w PSU , you have one ? for now we did not find a suitable one (cheap and quality good)
A tip that I’ll add with fitting a power supply is that you dont have to install the case that the power supply comes with. Your installing the whole thing in a case anyways, so you can remove the power supply case sides and top just installing the bottom board that contains all the components. I used stand offs for mother boards and just installed the pcb. My power supply also came with a thermal controlled fan which I removed. Marked and drilled holes in my lab power supply case and installed it there. Removing the power supply case saves a lot of space. As long as the power supply will fit in the lab supply case and you have about 1 1/2 inches left in the front of the case it should work.
Do you have updated USB meters? A lot of new USB proprietary power supplies come with extremely high current sources for ultra fast charging on their phones.
This is the same power supply and case I had the DPS5020 installed in. I just had to cut the front panel bigger to fit the new display (RD6024).
I original had a switch installed for the DPS5020 so I left it in but I soon realized the RD6024 has its on power switch but the switch is still needed to cut power to the power supply. This is a 1000 watt power supply with its case off and takes up most of the lab power supply case with just enough room for the DP6024 to clear everything. The thermal controlled fan that was in the original power supply case has been relocated to the lab power supply case and wired back to the original connection on the power supply.
.
.
.
.
This is the power supply Page Not Found - Aliexpress.com?
The case I purchased isn’t for sale anymore from the seller at Aliexpress but its size is 250 x 190 x 110mm. The front panel I made from 1/8” aluminum sheet. I wanted it stiffer than what the case came with, it was thin sheet metal.
usually when you remove the case of the input ac to dc PSU, the PSU fan is for the heat dissipation inside the PSU, now it needs to deliver the heat of the whole case, so it may have influence, if you replace with other fan which is more powerful, the influence may be lower
Its still in a case, its just the case is bigger now. The same amount of air is being moved as in the original case. I don’t know that I have actually ever heard the fan run, if it was it was very low, thermal controlled. I dont usually turn it up that high and if I do it’s usually only for a short time. I powered a small 12v air compressor off it (DPS5020) one time for several minutes at around 15 amps but that’s still only 180 watts. Thanks for the tip, I have several 80mm fans of different cfm, I can replace it with if I notice it running hot. I really like RD6024 so far, the on/off button is easier to push without having the case slide across the bench from trying to press the button. The X25A test cables are really nice also.