Up one level (Astron index)
Back to Home
  The Problem with Paralleled NTC Thermistors
as Inrush Current Limiters

Compiled and Maintained by Mike Morris WA6ILQ
   

A number of the Astron supplies have inrush reducing NTC thermistors and unfortunately some of those use a pair in parallel. For example, the early SS25 and SS-30 use a pair of 4 ohm 5 amp units (identified as RT1 and RT2 on the schematic). Look here at the top left. (opens in a new browser tab)

(Anybody have an SS-25 or an SS-30 that they can get a cellphone photo of the PC board showing the RT1 and RT2 positions?)

You can not parallel NTC thermistors to get additional current rating. They may have the same part number and the same specifications but the thermistors are not identical (some are even 15% tolerance) and won't evenly divide the current. It won't be 50% no matter how much wishful thinking you have. One of them will heat up before the other, and display a lower resistance and pass more current. The other will be a higher resistance, and therefore carry less current. Eventually one will burn up then the other unit will be forcewd to carry 100% and it too will burn out.

If you are going to use NTC thermistors as inrush reducers you need to use a single device. In the case of the Astron SS-25 or SS-30 it needs to be rated at 8 to 10 amps or so. As a repeater site emergency fix just replace it with a piece of wire (there's a fuse in the circuit, it's not going to burn up). When you get it back to the shop replace the pair with a single Bourns BN-LG15Y0R7MYB (it is rated at 0.7 ohms at 25 °C and is good for 8 amps) or use the SCK0R78A thermistor that Astron used in later supplies. Digi-Key has the Bourns part in stock as BN-LG15Y0R7MYB. (off-site link, opens in a new browser tab)

Back to the top of the page
Up one level (Astron index)
Back to Home


This page was created 15-Jan-2026 by WA6ILQ.

This web page, this web site, the information presented in and on its pages and in these modifications and conversions is © Copyrighted 1995 and (date of last update) by Kevin Custer W3KKC and multiple originating authors. All Rights Reserved, including that of paper and web publication elsewhere.