Originally posted by Arthur Dent
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By the way, Alex is correct. The reason transformer laminations are in thin sheets and insulated from one another is that his process reduces eddy current losses inside the iron core. Any solid iron core, or one that is laminated but uninsulated, one piece from the other, will have big eddy current losses, and may be unusable because of just that. The higher the frequency of signal ( like treble as opposed to 60 Hz) the thinner the laminations need to be. If you glue and grind iron sheet, your transformer may have disappointing results. But that's just what I read in books and proved in tests back when I designed transformers for a living.
4% silicon iron is usually only sold to transformer makers. That's the only big commercial use of it, so it would be really odd if it was in stock in a shop which didn't primarily make transformers. But it could happen, I guess.
By the way, what interleaving scheme are you planning to do on
(a) your power transformer
(b) your output transformer
and
(c) your power supply choke?
I always wanted to learn from a master.
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