Electronic – diodes blow with no load on full wave bridge rectifier

bridge-rectifierdiodeselectrolytic-capacitor

I have built what I thought is a simple first stage for a power supply consisting of only the full wave bridge rectifier (made up of individual 3A SMD diodes) and bulk capacitance.

The moment I apply power through the transformer my diodes blow. I've checked that I haven't installed any diodes back to front. The transformer can output a maximum of 4.81A but I apply power to the circuit with no load. I'm not planning to exceed the 3A limit in my final solution.enter image description here

The basic schematic for the circuit is as follows.
enter image description here

What on earth could be the problem? Is this caused by the initial charging of the capacitors? I've checked that the board also has no short circuits between the positive and the ground rails.

Update
two circuits with same results:
Circuit 1 – total capacitance: 6580µF (made up of 14 470µF electrolytic through hole capacitors in parallel)
Circuit 2 – total capacitance: 2820µF (made up of 6 470µF electrolytic through hole capacitors in parallel)
8 diodes making up two full wave bridge rectifiers are B340LA SMD 3A diodes each (http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/639175.pdf)
All of the above fed with a single toroidal transformer with two secondary windings of 18V/80VA each. Single secondary winding tested in each case with both having the same result (fire coming out of the diodes which are then failed short circuit).

Best Answer

Yep, Inrush is killing you, that is a lot of bulk capacitance to have without any inrush limiting. Assuming a trace resistance of 100mOhm, and that your 6 or 14 electrolytic capacitors in parallel will have ~ 0 ohm impedance, your instant current is 160A on startup. Here is a nice site for looking at this. MustCalculate

Most large capacitance banks have huge diodes and Capacitors designed to stand the inrush, or some form of inrush limiting, passive or active. A cheep passive solution is a NTC resistor, they are sold for this exact purpose, here are some on digikey: Here. You place them in series with the bank and the input voltage, as they heat up the resistance goes down.

Update:
I'll also add if you choose to go this route, notice the NTC's are rated for maximum capacitive load and approximate steady state current. The loading is usually for 120 and 240V but this can be adjusted to your ~16VAC easily. Since the important property is power dissipation, the difference is squared. for example:
a device rated for 500uF@240VAC will handle 2000uF@120VAC or 8000uF@60VAC. Notice the voltage difference is squared.

Also Note:
This method is only effective if the device is not powered on and off quickly in succession. The NTC must have time to cool back down to room temperature otherwise when you flip the power back on, the resistance will still be low and your diodes could go poof again. Typically they take less then a minute to cool off. That being said, they will still provide some protection even when hot, as they still have a lot more resistance then a PCB trace.