I was thinking along the lines of Ben's and John's comment, but using a 12v
PS, a battery, and a 50 HZ UPS/ BBU.
Old school, low tech, but it works
Paul
On Wed, Jul 16, 2025 at 2:50 PM Van Snyder via cctalk <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
wrote:
  On Wed, 2025-07-16 at 11:42 -0400, Will Cooke via
cctalk wrote:
  On 07/16/2025 11:10 AM EDT Tony Duell via cctalk
 <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
 On Wed, Jul 16, 2025 at 4:00 PM Jon Elson via cctalk
 <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
 What I might do is make up a cap bank that is 1.2 X larger
 than the 2 uF and power it up.
 
 Remember that the resonant frequency goes as 1/sqrt(L*C). So
 doesn't
 that mean you want a capacitor of 1.2^2 times the original value?
 -tony
 
 One thing to keep in mind is that the transformer may not be designed
 to work at 50 Hz.  A "normal" transformer will saturate if the
 frequency is too low.  A lot of 60Hz equipment won't work (well) on
 50 Hz unless the transformer is specifically designed for that.
 However, how that applies to a transformer that is already intended
 to saturate I don't know.  I do suspect it is still an issue since it
 will likely saturate sooner than expected, for some definition of
 sooner.
 
 
 The Computer History Museum in Sunnyvale, CA has a working IBM 1401
 computer from Germany. It has ferroresonant power supplies. They bought
 a converter to supply 50 Hz power because they were certain it wouldn't
 work at 60 Hz. And it has motors in the card reader, card punch,
 printer, and tape drives, that would all run at the wrong speed using
 60 Hz power.
 At first they had an antique and unreliable motor-generator. Now they
 have a switching supply that IBM provided (maybe donated).
 Will