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I'm poor. So I rebuilt the core of a 16 lbs microwave oven transformer and
now it's very quiet -- outside the chassis. I mounted it in the 3u power supply chassis, and the chassis resonates like crazy, at least 30 dB more noise than the transformer alone. Rubber/springs/foam didn't help much. I spent quite some time building a pneumatic vibration isolator with a pump and everything. Imagine my surprise when it turned out most of the vibration wasn't transmitted mechanically...the hum was being induced electromagnetically into the chassis! I almost cried! Repositioning didn't make much difference (more of the effect seems to come from the side with the primary winding, but orienting that side away from the vertical walls means having the core horizontal, which makes the hum worse; standing the transformer on its narrowest side doesn't fit in the chassis). All my testing was done with no load as the salt water resistor boiled too quickly and I took it apart. Would it get better/worse/same when it's loaded? And what can I do to deal with the issue, in terms of shielding or anything else? I swear I'm going to go crazy trying to figure this out. |
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