Originally posted by Steve A.
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Originally posted by uneumann
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When an inductor discharges into a diode, it should take longer than if the inductor is allowed to produce a large Voltage and discharge into a resistor or other circuit element, even a zener or MOV. You can see this in simple switching power supplies where the inductor doesn't fully discharge on the first couple of pulses and current spikes up until the output cap can charge up. I expect it to sound different, but have never heard it.
Could it be that even with interleaving, either side of the primary is well coupled to the secondary, but each side of the primary is not so well coupled to the other side? If you measure leakage inductance on one side of the primary, wouldn't you get a different number if you shorted the other side of the primary as opposed to shorting the secondary?
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