Originally posted by imaradiostar
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Originally posted by imaradiostar
This is where it gets weird. You have "peak voltage", and then you have "peak to peak voltage". This means you technically have two different RMS voltages...the RMS value of the peak and the RMS value of the peak-peak voltage. In each scenario, RMS = 70.7% of either or.
In other words. RMS value of the peak-peak voltage is 70.7% of the peak-peak while RMS of the peak voltage is 70.7% of the peak voltage. If you want to calculate average power across the full winding of the primary, you square the RMS of the peak-peak (70.7% of the peak-peak voltage) and divide THAT by the load, not the RMS of the peak voltage.
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