danny davis
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If by "overload" you mean that the primary draws excessive current, then yes.Measuring a transformer In-circuit , AC step down, AC 115 vac to 30 VAC
If there is an open or shorted component on the secondary winding of a transformer, can this measure O.L over load on the Primary winding?
An open component would likely cause less of a load. A short would cause more of a load. But you cannot measure anything about the secondary by using an ohmmeter on the primary. An ohmmeter will only tell you the resistance of the wire in the primary, and it could very well be 10 Ohms. But it would be the same resistance regardless of what is connected or shorted in the secondary circuit.If there is an open or shorted component on the secondary winding of a transformer, can this measure below 10 ohms on the primary winding?
As I said, the ohm reading on the primary is not affected by anything that goes on in any secondary winding.If one or two of the isolated secondary winding coils on the transformer are open or short, can this cause the primary winding to measure a different ohm reading? it will it be the same ohm measurement? does the resistance go up or down on the primary winding?
Likewise, ohm readings of the secondary windings are not affected by anything that goes on in the primary. The only thing an ohmmeter reading on a transformer winding will tell you is the resistance of the wire in that winding. That is all. It does not tell you anything more.If the Primary winding is shorted or open, can this cause the other secondary coils to measure different ohm readings? does the resistance of the secondary coils go up or down?
If by "overload" you mean that the primary draws excessive current, then yes.
The only thing an ohmmeter reading on a transformer winding will tell you is the resistance of the wire in that winding. That is all. It does not tell you anything more.
Do you know what happens to voltage and current when a transformer is overloaded?
If the secondary of a transformer is shorted then what tester would you use to measure an overload on its primary?
Does the DC resistance of the wire of one winding affect the DC resistance of another winding?
What is "impedance"?
No, the voltage does not rise, it drops.Question from Audioguru: "Do you know what happens to voltage and current when a transformer is overloaded?"
The voltage and current raises up, because the resistance inside the transformer goes down
Correct, an AC power meter.Question from Audioguru: "If the secondary of a transformer is shorted then what tester would you use to measure an overload on its primary?"
An AC power meter or AC volts meter
Correct for another reason. The AC impedance of one winding is coupled to other windings, not DC resistance.Question from Audioguru: "Does the DC resistance of the wire of one winding affect the DC resistance of another winding?"
It shouldn't, because the coils are isolated
Correct.Question from Audioguru: "What is "impedance"?"
AC resistance
the voltage does not rise, it drops.
Correct, the current rises.
No, the resistance in the transformer does not change. The LOAD resistance is too low.
orrect for another reason. The AC impedance of one winding is coupled to other windings, not DC resistance.
I do not know if your transformer tester can measure the transformer in a circuit.
You would need to test a good transformer to see if the original transformer tests the same or not.
Stop talking about shorts and opens as if they are similar. They are opposites. Speaking only of shorts, if a component connected to the secondary of the transformer shorts out, it will draw more current, causing the secondary to draw more current, which causes the primary to draw more current, which makes the primary get hot. What it does after that depends on how hot it gets. If it gets hot enough to melt the wire, that could cause the primary winding to become open. More likely it will just blow a fuse.If if a component was shorted or open on the secondary Circuit , the primary winding will draw more current? and overload the primary? causing it to short or open?
I see. I thought you were asking if an ohmmeter on the primary could detect a shorted component on the secondary. But you were actually thinking that the short on the secondary would cause the primary to burn out, and maybe go open circuit. Yes, that is possible. But it is not guaranteed. The primary might not get damaged at all. But if the primary does get damaged, then an ohmmeter can tell you that,but only after you turn off the power and disconnect anything else that the primary is connected to. And you said you wanted an in-circuit test. This is not an in-circuit test.What else is there to know? the ohm meters can measure if the transformer is SHORTED or OPEN,
Usually, no.Can you measure a transformer IN-CIRCUIT without any problems of interaction of the other secondary circuit?
if a component connected to the secondary of the transformer shorts out, it will draw more current, causing the secondary to draw more current, which causes the primary to draw more current, which makes the primary get hot.
Can you measure a transformer IN-CIRCUIT without any problems of interaction of the other secondary circuit?
Usually, no.
Why can't you see that V/R = I then if R is reduced then I is increased?? Don't you know simple arithmetic??Why does the transformer draws more current when the resistance is very low?
What's is the ohm law formulas that has a overload formula applied to ohms law?
It's not V/R = I because it's not overloading when i'ts V/R= I , i need a formula that applies the overloading to V/R=I
Because you do not know the current it is supposed to normally draw. It might never draw its maximum rated current and you might not even know its maximum rated current. Out of a circuit you should measure no or very low primary current and a secondary voltage a little higher than normal.Why can't you measure a transformer in circuit?
If the normal output of the transformer is 30V/3A which is 10 ohms then if the load reduces to 5 ohms the current is doubled to 6A then the 3A transformer us overloaded and gets hot.
Out of a circuit you should measure no or very low primary current and a secondary voltage a little higher than normal.
Why? Resistance is a DC measurement but a transformer works only from AC. Measuring the DC resistance of the coils with a DVM will show if the transformer is burnt out (then it would measure open) but looking at it and smelling it will also tell you that.I just measure the ohm resistance of the primary coil and isolated secondary coils with my DVM meter
I think you are wasting your time measuring and talking about a transformer. It is simply some wire around a core. AC goes in and AC comes out.What tests do you do in circuit or out of circuit when testing a Transformer?
So test your transformer by disconnecting the secondary and turning the AC power on to the primary. Measure the AC VOLTAGE at the secondary, if it is correct the transformer is good
Resistance is a DC measurement but a transformer works only from AC. Measuring the DC resistance of the coils with a DVM will show if the transformer is burnt out
Why don't you know that a short causes high current which is an overload??If a secondary isolated coil was shorted , can this cause the primary to overload? or change it's DC resistance?
OF COURSE NOT! A coil is simply a piece of wire. Its resistance is not changed by a shorted or open component in its load.Any reason why I can't test the Secondary coils in Circuit? if there is a component that is shorted or open, the secondary coils DC resistance would change?
You are wasting time by testing transformers.What other test or measurements would u do?
How else can a transformer fail?
Your English is awful. Maybe you are talking about "failures" not "fails".What are these AC transformer fails you guys are talking about? I guess I only know about how to test a transformer in DC resistance fails
What would the resistance be if turn 727 and turn 728 were shorted to each other?
Would your DVM with say 1% accuracy be able to confirm whether the short was there or not?
The same transformer has 100 turns on it's secondary side, it's thick copper wire with a resistance of 0.01 Ohms from end to end.
What would be the resistance if turns 5 and 6 shorted to each other?
Would your DVM with it's 1% accuracy be able to confirm if the short was there or not?
You forgot that a transformer works with AC, not DC. The IMPEDANCE (AC resistance) of its load is changed.
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