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miki wrote: My catalogue is probably 25 years old and has listings for audio output transformers up to No. 1668. Do you have a center-tapped primary and the various output impedances showing continuity amongst themselves ? (but insulated from the promary) miki. If you are sure this is a broadband audio transformer, get your scope and a 1KC square wave generator (the calibration generator on the Tek scope is probably good enough. Pick one winding, and apply the square wave, then pick another winding and look at it on the scope. Apply shunt resistance across the scope probe until you see a nice square wave with only a tiny overshoot. Now you know the impedance of one winding. Do this repeatedly and figure the winding impedance of all of them. From this you should be able to figure out what is intended as the primary and what is intended as the secondary, if you have a vague idea of the intended application. Now, you can put 6.3V AC across the primary through a capacitor, then look at the secondary on a scope. Use a bench supply to add some DC offset to the primary, and keep craking the DC voltage up until you see the level of the sine wave on the output start to drop off. NOW you know the level of acceptable DC offset current before the core saturates at near-zero power, from which you can fudge a full-power value. These are the two important things you want to know about an audio transformer. Power level is a little harder but you can just apply 60 Hz into a big load resistor until the transformer saturates. Full power fresponse tests will require an amp, though. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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