Yep, David's were the default wiring colors, but as far as I know the voltages and current ratings were the same as Jasons.M Fowler wrote:The ones we got are a little bit different from TM version.
TM
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Yep, David's were the default wiring colors, but as far as I know the voltages and current ratings were the same as Jasons.M Fowler wrote:The ones we got are a little bit different from TM version.
Twice !How much extra wire is involved in a centre tap?
It's very simple, when manufacturing a transformer CT is used twice as much copper as a single coil. Finally a CT transformer for a given power is designed as twice rating power than a non CT transfomer scheduled for the same power.What exactly were you proposing?
I believe you have it backwards, in a non-center tapped PT design you have double the HT current rating. Thus, in order to increase the current rating of the HT winding you have to increase the diameter of the wire used. So, if you have to increase the diameter of the winding are you terribly decreasing the amount of copper? Most likely not.Mikka wrote:Twice !How much extra wire is involved in a centre tap?
It's very simple, when manufacturing a transformer CT is used twice as much copper as a single coil. Finally a CT transformer for a given power is designed as twice rating power than a non CT transfomer scheduled for the same power.What exactly were you proposing?
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It's easy to see that CT 35VA HV winding are not enough for a 6V6 or EL84 13W push-pull.
Moreover, the manufacturer advises this transformer for SE EL84 or 6V6.
However the center tap don't help to use the total power habilities hide in power trannies.
Center tap was used because of the rectifier design but today if we are not against to use silicium diodes we better have to use a full wave design.
I tested and took few mesurements on the 369GX PT.
HT coils R => 175/165 ohms, U=240V (no charge, no consumption) for a mains of 230V with a 240V primary wiring.
(240 / 230 ) x 240 = 250V
250 - 225 = 25V => 25 / 225 = 11% of regulation ratio.
175 + 165 = 335 Ohms
25 / 335 = 74.6mA
0.0746 x (225 + 225)* = 33.5VA
It's closed to what I assumed above.
So I can say, if I can separate the two secondary coils, and wire them in // then the new HT caracteristics will be :
335 / 2 = 167.5 Ohms (becaus of the // coils)
25 / 167.5 = 150mA
0.150 x 225* = 33.5VA. I totaly agree with that !Incidentally, before silicon rectifiers were available, consider that a FWB arrangement would have required two additional and costly vacuum rectifiers, the additional volume, the associated hardware, wiring, and heat rejection, plus the additional 4-6A of heater current from the power transformer to run them. In addition to all of that, the FWB incurs two diode voltage drops of 20-50V instead of just one for the FW. All of this would make a FWB power supply using vacuum rectifiers prohibitively expensive and inefficient as compared to a FW supply.
In the final result of both equations is the VA rating of the transformer. It proves that you have gotten the spec wrong. It is 225-0-225vac @0.075mA. Which gives a VA rating of 33.75
Ok, I can try !Could you explain the equations and their importance?