NeilP said:
Cor, where on the Schematic is the OVP point as printed on the board?
The short answer is - I marked it on my sketch

Look at the voltage feedback divider with the potmeter SVR1 and then R124 connecting to R122 and to U100 pin 3. That is the OVP marked next to the LED. This has nothing to do with the Overvoltage Protection, but this is the Output Voltage divider - the output voltage will be whatever causes the OVP point to be 2.5V.
With the 1k pot at approx 430 Ohms you will get 48V at the output, because the divider is 44k2 and 2k+430. With the potmeter at zero Ohms the divider is 44k2 and 2k, so the output becomes (44.2+2)/2 times 2.5V equals 57.75V and with the pot turned to the max 1k value the divider becomes (44.2+3)/3 times 2.5V equals 39.3V.
You probably can go lower in output by increasing the value of SVR1 or feeding in an external voltage, but at some point the power supply itself is so starved for power to give to its internal circuits (which is also tapped from the same transformer) that it will simply shutdown. You may avoid the power supply shutdown by adding resistors across its output, just to bleed power away and keep the internal circuits alive. See the 5k6 resistor next to the LED at the output of the supply? That resistor has two functions - bleed the output caps down so you don't get a big spark when you connect something to the output after powering down the supply *and* to give a minimum power load to the supply to allow it to generate enough power for its internal circuits.
NOTE that this also means that the power supply should not be left connected to your batteries for months after you switched it off, because eventually that approx 10 mA bleeder current can discharge your batteries, a 5Ah pack will need approx 500 hours to be drawn down, which is around 3 weeks.
SBD..check the schematic on first post of the thread..The relay chops power to pretty much the whole board.
While it is true that the relay disconnects the AC line from the rectifier, there is still the NTC RTH1 that will still feed the power supply. The supply is not switching off due to the relay dropping out, but the relay is dropping out due to the power supply shutting down.
Note that the power supply is feeding a battery pack and the battery continues to feed the same voltage back to the power supply, whether it runs or not. That means that the voltage feedback (the OVP point that we discussed in this same post) will pretty much stay at 2.5V and the result is that the opto U2 will continue to conduct to feed back that the output voltage is regulating and around the correct voltage level.
Now look at the circuit for the COMP (pin 1) of U1. The opto pulls the COMP pin to ground and the spec of U1 says that if the COMP pin is below approx 1.2V (two diode drops to ground) then U1 will go into shutdown.
I believe that due to the 48V output voltage staying at the correct level and the output current being so low, there is no power to the internal circuits such as Q5 which regulates the power to U1 and the relay. With that power gone, the relay clicks off and U1 shuts down also (it requires a minimum Vcc voltage of around 8V, see "undervoltage lockout" of the TL3845P) Of course U1 will try to restart because it is fed through the 7k5 and 20k resistors directly off the AC line, but I believe the COMP pin will keep U1 in shutdown (will need to check once I have this NES going again) and the relay can't engage because there is a blocking diode between the Vcc pin of U1 and the output of Q5 to minimize power draw in this startup phase.