Re: driving two coils at once on a transformer
- From: Ron <ron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 19:13:52 -0700
On Oct 23, 4:49 am, Jamie Morken <jmor...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to see if it is possible to drive two coils on a
transformer at the same time and extra the combined power from
a third coil. :)
Here are three cases of transformer operation:
1. two coils on transformer 1:1 turns ratio,
coil 1 driven at 30V/1amp
2. three coils on transformer 1:1:1 turns ratios,
coil 1 and 2 driven at 30V/0.5Amps
3. three coils on transformer 1:0.5:1 turns ratios,
coil 1 driven at 30V/0.5Amps, coil 2 driven at 15V/2Amps
Will all three cases give the same output on the third coil,
and will they all work the same assuming that the two driven
coils are driven properly in phase?
cheers,
Jamie
Hi---
Check the internet for "Micron Transformer" or "impervitran
Transformer".
Their catalog has a short formula/section on how to size a transformer
for an inductive load or multiple loads at the same tome or various
combinations.
.
- References:
- driving two coils at once on a transformer
- From: Jamie Morken
- driving two coils at once on a transformer
- Prev by Date: Re: The Electric Car
- Next by Date: Re: A non-traditional use of LM431
- Previous by thread: Re: driving two coils at once on a transformer
- Next by thread: Re: driving two coils at once on a transformer
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|