Hi all. I know that this is covered in other posts, but this has left me scratching my head. I have picked up an old (date stamp June 1947) SE OPT. There are no impedances marked, so I set up a rig using a 6V rated mains transformer. When I hook up the OPT primary to the the mains secondary, my DMM reads 7.83VAC on the primary and 0.092VAC on the OPT secondary. Using the maths described elsewhere, this gives me a Vp:Vs ratio of 85.1.
85.1^2 = 7243.5
this means that for an 8ohm impedance speaker, the primary impedance would be near enough 58k.
This seems to be very high. I have briefly tried this OPT with a 6BW6 output and it worked. Is my methodology correct, and is such an impedance ratio feasible? What sort of application would an OPT of such a ratio have?
Many thanks as always.
85.1^2 = 7243.5
this means that for an 8ohm impedance speaker, the primary impedance would be near enough 58k.
This seems to be very high. I have briefly tried this OPT with a 6BW6 output and it worked. Is my methodology correct, and is such an impedance ratio feasible? What sort of application would an OPT of such a ratio have?
Many thanks as always.
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