I was doing the last soldering connections of my first build and would have been ready to start testing it had I not damaged a part from too much heat. I was using a 45 Watt Weller iron instead of the 25 Watt one I'd used for almost all of the build as I was soldering to the lugs of a switch and thought I could use a little more heat. This was my speaker impedance selector switch which I soldered my OT secondaries to as well as a 250 Ohm 5 Watt power resistor. I got the connection(s) way too hot as the solder was still liquid and bubbling about 5 seconds after I removed the iron. I destroyed the power resistor despite having an alligator clip on the lead as a heat sink. It only reads 20 Ohms now. I also destroyed the switch (heavy duty switch) as it is all shorted out internally now. Sounds really stupid but I didn't think a 45 Watt iron would get things that hot for the amount of time I had it on the connection.
Kind of a pain that I have to order another resistor and wait for that before trying it out as I don't have a spare. My greater concern though is if there's a possibility I damaged my OT from this extreme heat. The transformer leads are roughly 7 inches long 18 guage wire. Does this sound possible or likely? Is there a way I can test it such as applying a known voltage to one of the secondaries and measuring the voltage on the primary? The transformer is a Hammond 1650F.
Thanks,
Greg
Kind of a pain that I have to order another resistor and wait for that before trying it out as I don't have a spare. My greater concern though is if there's a possibility I damaged my OT from this extreme heat. The transformer leads are roughly 7 inches long 18 guage wire. Does this sound possible or likely? Is there a way I can test it such as applying a known voltage to one of the secondaries and measuring the voltage on the primary? The transformer is a Hammond 1650F.
Thanks,
Greg
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