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![]() "Steven P. Burrows" wrote in message news:461mg.57866$9c6.34117@dukeread11... I recently completed restoring a pair of S-40B radios. The original power transformers were pretty marginal, so I replaced them with similar transformers that I bought from Antique Electronic Supply (the new xfrmrs were Fender amp replacements). Everything seemed to work ok for a couple of weeks of light use of my radio (I gave the other to my father). Last week while I was listening to my S-40B, its power supply blew a fuse (a 5A cartridge fuse that I installed in the radio). I traced the problem back to the "new" power transformer. It appeared to have a short circuit of some kind, though I could never pin down exactly where this short was using a DVM. I've been using a 1A quick blow in my S-40A. Hasn't blown in six years of semi-regular use. I used an analog AC current meter to estimate the fuse value. My S-40A would always draw well under an amp except when I was hot switching it. I had some 1A fuses handy so I tried one. I would have raised the current rating if the fuse seemed touchy, but it seems to have worked well. The radio normally draws something like 60-70 watts. 1A at 120V is 120 watts. 5A at 120V is 600 watts. The initial fuse blow occurred while the radio was running and my house's central air conditioner was switching on. Up to that first fuse blow, I noticed some significant flicker in the dial lamps (run off the filament winding on the power transformer). At first I thought that I was watching a dying lamp bulb, but now it seems that I was witnessing the breakdown of the power transformer. My question is, would installing an inrush current protector thermistor in the primary winding circuit of this radio prevent a repeat of the transformer breakdown? If this is a good move, what size of thermistor should I use? Any help or recommendations would be appreciated. Inrush current limiters are thermistors which have a higher cold resistance than thier hot resistance. They limit current surges until they warm up and then they have little effect. In your case, the radio would have been operating and the current limiter would already have been hot. A inrush current limiter would have made no difference. Inrush current limiters really don't make much difference with equipment which uses a rectifier tube, anyway. The tube gives an even gentler B+ startup than a inrush current limiter. The current limiter might help protect tube heaters. I've experimented with inrush current limiters on both transformer sets and series string sets. In both instances the dial lamps would come up more gently. I don't think they make alot of practical difference with transformer sets, but they might help protect the abused heaters in a series string radio. Steve Burrows Frank Dresser |
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