Lower Voltage of 15 VDC Power Supply to 13 VDC for DC Blower

dcpower

I have a centrifugal blower, model 007-A42-32D, that uses 12 VDC at 17.5 amps. The performance information provided by the manufacturer, SPAL Automotive, was acquired at 13 VDC.

I have a power supply that provides 15 VDC at 20 A. I feel that applying 15 VDC to the blower, given that it will be subject to continuous duty, may cause premature failure.

Question #1:
Is applying 15 VDC to a blower that was tested by the manufacturer at 13 VDC problematic?

Question #2:
Will someone please provide to me the simplest method of reducing the voltage of the power supply using electronic components?

Thank you to all who help for your time.

edit:
I understand Voltage is the product of Current and Resistance as in V = IR. Since 12 VDC power supplies capable of 17.5 A minimum are not cheap, if the placement of a resistor can allow my 15 VDC power supply to work, that is the most sensible choice.

Given V = IR, if I = 17.5 A, then R must equal the equivalent series resistance of the blower combined with additional resistors such that V will equal 12. Is that correct?

Best Answer

  1. Will 15 V hurt a 12 V blower? Maybe. What does the datasheet say about absolute maximum and operating maximum voltage?
  2. Reducing the voltage at this power level is the wrong way to go about this. Get the right power supply. 12 V is a common power supply voltage, so this will be easy.