Originally posted by R.G.
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why not two different pieces of iron? One saturates positive, the other negative, and then we combine those.. er, somehow...
Let me explain further. To me, saturable reactor means an inductor whose inductance can be varied with a DC bias. The things they used to use as lamp dimmers and welding current controllers before SCRs were invented.
But the variation is done by saturating the core more or less. And since its behaviour is symmetrical, and the flux due to the load current must add to the flux from the control current, then it must produce that symmetrical distortion.
They're made exactly how you say: a different part of the core saturates on each half-cycle, and in fact you can make a saturable reactor from two regular transformers. Primaries in parallel as the load winding, secondaries in series as the control winding. The load windings pass alternate half-cycles, so each transformer is actually outputting a net DC current, the reason for my comment above.
So, for instance, you could connect a saturable reactor across the speaker terminals of an oversized OT, and get variable saturation.
As a professional magnetic designer, I'm sure you can figure out how to combine the OT and the saturable reactor into a multi-legged magnetic monstrosity.
true core saturation can be a very ugly thing.
If you want to hear true core saturation, you can hook a guitar amp up to a bass cabinet and play bass through it.
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