Obviously paralleling gives you lower primary winding resistance thus
lower lose/heating.
vax, 9000
On 9/1/06, Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com> wrote:
I have a power transformer that I scavenged out of a
15-year old UPS, so
it's probably pretty close to being on-topic.
At any rate, I want to use this transformer in a DC power supply. I have
three sets of windings: two sets are 120/240v "universal" series/parallel
type and the third is 24-0-24v center-tapped.
I want to run this from 120vac.
Is there any benefit to paralleling the two sets of 120/240v main windings
(i.e. 4 120v windings in parallel)? Will it increase the power rating of
the unit or is that mostly a function of the secondary winding?
Suppose instead of 24-0-24 on the secondary, I'd like 12-0-12. Obviously,
one way to get this is to hook the primary (-ies) up as 240v. Is there any
benefit to be gained in parallelling the two 240v primaries?
Thanks,
Chuck