Hi.
I suspect the answer is a great big NO, but I thought I ask.
I have a friend who's bought an American amp on eBay for use here in Australia.
The amp (Silvertone 1484) is designed for 117VAC. In Australia we use 240V. 250V on a good day!
The amp uses a voltage doubler (silicon diodes) on the secondary side of the power transformer to get to 480V (the schematic is easy to find on the internet).
I'm wondering if it be possible to connect the primary to 240V and re-arrange the secondary(ies) to a straight half bridge instead of doubler?
I'd need to mod the filament and -ve bias too, but this is not difficult as they have center taps. I can use a resistor network and pot to add 'adjustable bias'.
1. Would this be dangerous? I.e. exceed the primary insulation breakdown voltage?
2. Would there be issues, i.e. core saturation etc.
3. Forget it. He's got a step-down transformer anyway.
Interested in your thoughts.
Matt, Melbourne, Aust.
I suspect the answer is a great big NO, but I thought I ask.
I have a friend who's bought an American amp on eBay for use here in Australia.
The amp (Silvertone 1484) is designed for 117VAC. In Australia we use 240V. 250V on a good day!
The amp uses a voltage doubler (silicon diodes) on the secondary side of the power transformer to get to 480V (the schematic is easy to find on the internet).
I'm wondering if it be possible to connect the primary to 240V and re-arrange the secondary(ies) to a straight half bridge instead of doubler?
I'd need to mod the filament and -ve bias too, but this is not difficult as they have center taps. I can use a resistor network and pot to add 'adjustable bias'.
1. Would this be dangerous? I.e. exceed the primary insulation breakdown voltage?
2. Would there be issues, i.e. core saturation etc.
3. Forget it. He's got a step-down transformer anyway.
Interested in your thoughts.
Matt, Melbourne, Aust.
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