Hi all,
I posted this on another forum but have nothing after about a week so here I am asking here. I copied both posts in the other forum's thread to give a more complete picture of what's going on.
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Part 1
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I have a salvaged power transformer out of an old radio. It was originally powering a 5Y3GT rectifier, a single 6V6 and 10 octal tubes for everything from preamps to radio circuits.
My question is this:
I'd like to build a slightly hotrodded 5e7 clone like this:
http://www.kilback.net/homebrewtweak...hem-od3_r3.gif
Even though my original (salvaged radio) transformer was only running a single power tube, would it have enough to run another power tube since it was powering a dozen tubes in the original radio it came from? It has a single primary coil and a high voltage output with a center tap + what I'd assume are both 5v and 6.3v windings. Of course only powering it will tell me what they actually put out (edit :: see part 2 below).
The transformer itself actually has one more wire than the schematic shows. The schematic shows the 5v and 6.3v windings with no center taps, but there are the following wires coming out of the transformer:
2 black stranded (I'm assuming primary)
2 white solid wires
2 green solid wires + a green wire that is actually a loop returning to the core
3 red stranded wires
The schematic (of course) doesn't show me what colors are what. In addition, I have to guess at the colors because the read & white are all more dirty grey than anything else, even under the bells (which I have off).
Any idea if this transformer should be able to deliver adequate current for a 5y3 rec, a PAIR of 6v6 or 6l6 and 3 12ax7s?
It sure was running more tubes than that originally, 12 total including a 'Magic Eye'.
I'm sure the voltage is there, just not sure about current delivery in radios vs. guitar amplifiers.
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Part 2
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Rather than just hook up an unknown tranny to my house current, I decided to try powering it with a wall wart and doing a little math.
I hooked the transformer in question up to a 6vdc-300mA wall wart.
The power coming from my wall measured at 118.7vac.
With no load, the wart produces 7.29vdc.
Hooked up to the transformer, it's delivering 3.73v to the primaries.
I'm assuming the reason for the huge drop is because wall warts generally aren't designed to shove electricity through gigantic power transformers. The coils are probably offering a lot of resistance.
Green wires measure .026v and .011v C.T.
Red wires measure 2.64v and 1.32v C.T.
Yellow (or white or whatever they are) measure .019v (no C.T.)
Dividing my power coming into the wart by what's coming out connected to the transformer's primary, I get a factor of 31.823056300268096514745308310992 - lets call that 32 for simplicity's sake.
That means at 118vac mains voltage, multiplying by a factor of 32 ::
Green wires would deliver .832v
Yellow wires would deliver .928v
Red wires would deliver 84.48v
... da heck?!
According to the schematic for the radio this came from the first thing out of the rectifier was a 15uf/15uf/10uf cap can rated at 450v. A 5Y3 rectifier drops something like 50v as it does it's job IIRC. I can't imagine this thing ran on about 30something volts originally with a dozen tubes on it. I could post the schematic, but didn't because the power transformer is only shown as a part number and the schematic has no voltage values on it anywhere.
What am I likely doing wrong here? Any ideas? At first I thought maybe the primaries were really the red wires, but not with a center tap. Same thing with the green wires. Would it make more sense if the white (or yellow or whatever they are) are the primaries? I also thought maybe the transformer was no good, but if that were the case it shouldn't be passing any current through at least some of these windings - or would it?
I don't really want to just wire up the tranny to my house mains to measure it if I don't need to but if I have to I will. I'd much prefer to do this testing part at low-voltage if I can get away with it. I like my own internal electrical system just the way it is. I'd also like to not fry the transformer before I get a chance to do that running a guitar through it.
Any help is appreciated.
Cheers,
- JJG
I posted this on another forum but have nothing after about a week so here I am asking here. I copied both posts in the other forum's thread to give a more complete picture of what's going on.
##############################
Part 1
##############################
I have a salvaged power transformer out of an old radio. It was originally powering a 5Y3GT rectifier, a single 6V6 and 10 octal tubes for everything from preamps to radio circuits.
My question is this:
I'd like to build a slightly hotrodded 5e7 clone like this:
http://www.kilback.net/homebrewtweak...hem-od3_r3.gif
Even though my original (salvaged radio) transformer was only running a single power tube, would it have enough to run another power tube since it was powering a dozen tubes in the original radio it came from? It has a single primary coil and a high voltage output with a center tap + what I'd assume are both 5v and 6.3v windings. Of course only powering it will tell me what they actually put out (edit :: see part 2 below).
The transformer itself actually has one more wire than the schematic shows. The schematic shows the 5v and 6.3v windings with no center taps, but there are the following wires coming out of the transformer:
2 black stranded (I'm assuming primary)
2 white solid wires
2 green solid wires + a green wire that is actually a loop returning to the core
3 red stranded wires
The schematic (of course) doesn't show me what colors are what. In addition, I have to guess at the colors because the read & white are all more dirty grey than anything else, even under the bells (which I have off).
Any idea if this transformer should be able to deliver adequate current for a 5y3 rec, a PAIR of 6v6 or 6l6 and 3 12ax7s?
It sure was running more tubes than that originally, 12 total including a 'Magic Eye'.
I'm sure the voltage is there, just not sure about current delivery in radios vs. guitar amplifiers.
##############################
Part 2
##############################
Rather than just hook up an unknown tranny to my house current, I decided to try powering it with a wall wart and doing a little math.
I hooked the transformer in question up to a 6vdc-300mA wall wart.
The power coming from my wall measured at 118.7vac.
With no load, the wart produces 7.29vdc.
Hooked up to the transformer, it's delivering 3.73v to the primaries.
I'm assuming the reason for the huge drop is because wall warts generally aren't designed to shove electricity through gigantic power transformers. The coils are probably offering a lot of resistance.
Green wires measure .026v and .011v C.T.
Red wires measure 2.64v and 1.32v C.T.
Yellow (or white or whatever they are) measure .019v (no C.T.)
Dividing my power coming into the wart by what's coming out connected to the transformer's primary, I get a factor of 31.823056300268096514745308310992 - lets call that 32 for simplicity's sake.
That means at 118vac mains voltage, multiplying by a factor of 32 ::
Green wires would deliver .832v
Yellow wires would deliver .928v
Red wires would deliver 84.48v
... da heck?!
According to the schematic for the radio this came from the first thing out of the rectifier was a 15uf/15uf/10uf cap can rated at 450v. A 5Y3 rectifier drops something like 50v as it does it's job IIRC. I can't imagine this thing ran on about 30something volts originally with a dozen tubes on it. I could post the schematic, but didn't because the power transformer is only shown as a part number and the schematic has no voltage values on it anywhere.
What am I likely doing wrong here? Any ideas? At first I thought maybe the primaries were really the red wires, but not with a center tap. Same thing with the green wires. Would it make more sense if the white (or yellow or whatever they are) are the primaries? I also thought maybe the transformer was no good, but if that were the case it shouldn't be passing any current through at least some of these windings - or would it?
I don't really want to just wire up the tranny to my house mains to measure it if I don't need to but if I have to I will. I'd much prefer to do this testing part at low-voltage if I can get away with it. I like my own internal electrical system just the way it is. I'd also like to not fry the transformer before I get a chance to do that running a guitar through it.
Any help is appreciated.
Cheers,
- JJG
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