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- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!infonode!ingr!b30news!catbyte.b30.ingr.com!medin
- From: medin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com (Dave Medin)
- Subject: Re: How do constant voltage (ferroresonant) transformers work?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.185834.22532@b30.ingr.com>
- Sender: usenet@b30.ingr.com (Usenet Feed)
- Reply-To: medin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com
- Organization: Intergraph Corporation, Huntsville AL
- References: <1992Nov15.031727.25053@imax.imax.com> <1992Nov18.052939.25480@u.washington.edu>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 18:58:34 GMT
- Lines: 63
-
- In article <1992Nov18.052939.25480@u.washington.edu>, whit@carson.u.washington.edu (John Whitmore) writes:
- |> In article <1992Nov15.031727.25053@imax.imax.com> dave@imax.imax.com (Dave Martindale) writes:
- |> >I just bought an old Sola CVS-series constant-voltage transformer.
- |>
- |> >1. How does it WORK? I can't explain how it does its voltage regulation
- |> > trick with just a transformer and a capacitor.
-
- <Good description on how it works deleted>
-
- |> >2. The label says that the transformer is "harmonic neutralized". What
- |> > would the output waveform look like without this?
- |>
- |> Because saturation is a kind of regulation in itself, it
- |> is possible to make a third-harmonic resonant circuit to give
- |> roughly square-wave output from a ferroresonant transformer (the
- |> design is slightly different from what I described above, I think).
-
- Harmonic neutralization means that the output secondary is resonant,
- too (or nearly so), such that distortion products of the regulation
- process are removed. Typical THD at full load is about %3 for a
- harmonic-neutralized version. This is as clean or cleaner than
- your average utility line. The un-neutralized ones have a
- very ugly-looking output...
-
- |> >3. What sort of winding temperature would the transformer be designed for?
- |> > I've had it running at a little under 1/2 rated load for a few hours,
- |> > with the input voltage at the lower end of the regulation range,
- |> > and the temperature inside the core is about 70 degrees Celcius.
- |> > This seems a bit high to me for only half load.
- |>
- |> Losses in the iron are circa 20% of full rated load, and they
- |> DO NOT GO DOWN when the load is lessened. You are still running
- |> a lot of quiescent current in the resonant secondary, after all.
- |> Temperature limit on these devices is roughly that of the varnish
- |> that insulates the wiring, unless it has soldered connections that
- |> would melt first.
-
- The varnish is good for about 120 degrees C, and yes, they run hot
- AND hum (magnetostrictive motion in the core).
-
- |> Reliability is very high. I have black crinkle-finish
- |> CV transformers that work just fine (estimated 40 years old).
- |> Also, as surge-protectors go, this kind of device has
- |> my vote: it absorbs a surge with a few dozen pounds of steel and
- |> copper, not just a wimpy ten-gram MOV.
-
- Yeah, a ferro-resonant transformer is about the best form of
- power conditioning you can get. Unfortunately, they're real
- expensive unless you can get them surplus. I thought I'd died
- and gone to heaven when I got an auction lot of 20 of the 1KW
- models. I was vacuumed clean when local HAMs found out about them.
-
- --
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