And a fair amount of patience ha.I am very impressed with the ability to unwind a transformer in a way that will allow it to be rewound with the same wire. That requires a great deal of motivation and a fair amount of skill..
And a fair amount of patience ha.I am very impressed with the ability to unwind a transformer in a way that will allow it to be rewound with the same wire. That requires a great deal of motivation and a fair amount of skill..
Yes, but the 9x 0.06mm wire are soldered together at each end , won't that just count has one !If a 230V primary has 900 turns, then a 420V secondary should have 1640 turns, and that is pretty close to 9 x 175.
Certainly turns in parallel such as the 9 strands will count as only the turns of the whole conductor.Yes, but the 9x 0.06mm wire are soldered together at each end , won't that just count has one !
That would make more sense. A primary that was tapped 0-120-240-415 (or 0-115-230-400) and a low voltage secondary, with the primary on one section of the bobbin and the secondary on the other.So now I am wondering if it is possible that the actual voltage is less, and that to get the 420 volts this winding was connected in series with the primary winding in an additive manner?