Is there a convention to the way the Primary and Secondary impedances are stated?
What I mean is an OT with a 5.5k primary and 16ohm secondary is easy.
But if the same transformer were to have a second tap added on the secondary for 8ohm, then if I were to use that then the primary isn't seeing 5.5k any more. Now I think I could calculate the voltage but...
I have quite a few OTs collected now that are labelled along the lines of 5.5k primary, 4, 8, 16 secondary.
So how do I know which tap gives the rated primary figure?
Back in the early dawn of the establishing of output transformer wisdom was unwritten lore set down which means that the given figure for the primary impedance is that which you get from using the highest value tap on the secondary? Or the lowest? Or was there no such convention ever established and I'm going to have to either guess or just test each one as and when I'm thinking of using it. Which I will probaly do anyway since manufacturers given values are often out anyway.
What I mean is an OT with a 5.5k primary and 16ohm secondary is easy.
But if the same transformer were to have a second tap added on the secondary for 8ohm, then if I were to use that then the primary isn't seeing 5.5k any more. Now I think I could calculate the voltage but...
I have quite a few OTs collected now that are labelled along the lines of 5.5k primary, 4, 8, 16 secondary.
So how do I know which tap gives the rated primary figure?
Back in the early dawn of the establishing of output transformer wisdom was unwritten lore set down which means that the given figure for the primary impedance is that which you get from using the highest value tap on the secondary? Or the lowest? Or was there no such convention ever established and I'm going to have to either guess or just test each one as and when I'm thinking of using it. Which I will probaly do anyway since manufacturers given values are often out anyway.
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