I have worked with devices that have a Power Transformer that needed to be replaced. I did not do the replacing myself, but I was able to find a replacement very easily, just by looking at the existing one.
I am working through a DVD tutorial on DIY Tube Guitar Amps, and even though the video(s) are really awesome(!!!), every once and a while, they assume the audience knows things that I just do not. To make matters worse, the author is from Croatia originally, but lives, and has been living in Australia for a long time. So right out of the gate, I start to get the feeling that some of the components he is using are either not available here in the US, they are called something different here, or there are just some concepts that I am not aware of yet.
I have attached a .jpg image that I made... literally just by pausing the DVD and sketching in Adobe Illustrator the rough shape and label values from the transformer they are using. On the same graphic, I used Illustrator to draw up the first section of the power supply schematic. This is my first time drawing a schematic, and again the guy is not from the US, so if there are some weird things that look funny, that may be why. In the DVD, he is sketching the schematic on a dry erase board.
Basically, I have gone to Digi-Key, the Hammond Mfg website, parts-express, and several other amp and vintage electronic supply website, and I cannot find a transformer that matches all of the parameters that their power transformer has. Also, I know how a transformer works, for the most part. AC voltage comes in through a primary coil, induces a voltage into 1, 2, 3, 4... however many secondary coils, which are stronger or weaker based on the number of windings, and can sometimes have a "Center Tap" which can make one secondary coil behave almost like two. I am, however not as knowledgeable about current. In the video he mentions X.X Amps, and/or XX mili-amps. But when I go to one of those above electronic's websites, they all have these long menus that you select parameters, and then filter the results... the current this and current that doesn't seem to make any sense and/or just does not match the label on the transformer in the video.
If any of you guys have a second to take a look at the graphic I've attached, I'd love some tips on what you think. I'm not sure at this point if I have enough information to find one yet.
Thanks guys!
I am working through a DVD tutorial on DIY Tube Guitar Amps, and even though the video(s) are really awesome(!!!), every once and a while, they assume the audience knows things that I just do not. To make matters worse, the author is from Croatia originally, but lives, and has been living in Australia for a long time. So right out of the gate, I start to get the feeling that some of the components he is using are either not available here in the US, they are called something different here, or there are just some concepts that I am not aware of yet.
I have attached a .jpg image that I made... literally just by pausing the DVD and sketching in Adobe Illustrator the rough shape and label values from the transformer they are using. On the same graphic, I used Illustrator to draw up the first section of the power supply schematic. This is my first time drawing a schematic, and again the guy is not from the US, so if there are some weird things that look funny, that may be why. In the DVD, he is sketching the schematic on a dry erase board.
Basically, I have gone to Digi-Key, the Hammond Mfg website, parts-express, and several other amp and vintage electronic supply website, and I cannot find a transformer that matches all of the parameters that their power transformer has. Also, I know how a transformer works, for the most part. AC voltage comes in through a primary coil, induces a voltage into 1, 2, 3, 4... however many secondary coils, which are stronger or weaker based on the number of windings, and can sometimes have a "Center Tap" which can make one secondary coil behave almost like two. I am, however not as knowledgeable about current. In the video he mentions X.X Amps, and/or XX mili-amps. But when I go to one of those above electronic's websites, they all have these long menus that you select parameters, and then filter the results... the current this and current that doesn't seem to make any sense and/or just does not match the label on the transformer in the video.
If any of you guys have a second to take a look at the graphic I've attached, I'd love some tips on what you think. I'm not sure at this point if I have enough information to find one yet.
Thanks guys!
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