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Old October 29th 08, 12:09 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Henry Kolesnik Henry Kolesnik is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Dec 2006
Posts: 224
Default I built a 7.5VAC 21Amp transformer now it has lots of buzz

Hey Grump
A transformer is one of the simplest electrical machines and pretty well
understood in the classical design but when some of the parameters are
changed we don't have much experience or investigation and probably
wont. Hot swappable rectifier modules have made transformer based
rectifiers uneconomical kinda like carburetors and fuel injection. If
you have the time, check with some of the old time designers of
transformer rectifiers. Let me now what you find out. I had some notes
but those are long gone.
Hank
"Grumpy The Mule" wrote in message
...
Howdy Hank,

Thanks for the follow-up! Perhaps they used a voltage regulating
transformer. I think some of the telcom rectifiers used them.
I know some mainframe computers did.

It's still a curiosity to me. Though I've seen enough occult
behavior from wound magnetic devices that I wouldn't discount it,
I'm tempted to wonder if there's another variable that was
coincident with the welded laminations.

73



"Henry Kolesnik" wrote in
:

Grumpy
Years ago in 93 or so on a Telco fiber system by Alcatel we took
severe
hits when the air conditioner came on and it was traced to the
station
rectifier. The Gould rectifiers had a weld bead and when we replaced
them another make which I can't recall that didn't have weld beads
the
problem went away. Its quite strange since the rectifiers floated
big
batteries but a vco in system was sensitive to the spike. After
doing
some research I found an explanation that I can't recall because I
was
too busy with other problems and mine had gone away. Alcatel spent
several hundred thousand trying to find the problem and I stumbled on
to
it by shear luck.

73
Hank WD5JFR