It isn't good practise to connect transformers in series although technically it is possible. If two idential transformers with 110V primaries are wired in series and fed from 220V, *AND THEIR SECONDARY LOADS ARE IDENTICAL* it will work, each primary will still have 110V across it.
As soon as you change the loads on the secondaries, the primary imedances will change and the primary voltages will no longer be equal, one will have more voltage than the other and you risk damage.
I want to know if connecting in series two transformer will consume more power or not compared to connecting it in parallel (I am talking about the whole power that will be consumed by the amplifier). Also how will the fuse in the primary be affected in with such connection. I'm building a power supply for my power amplifier... I have two 220/120 to 12V transformer available at hand and I want to juice the maximum power I can take from it.
Under conditions described by BETWIXT (see post above) you can connect two transformers in series or in parallel (identical windings, balanced loads etc) and the available power stays the same ..
P = P1 + P2
What supply voltage you are planning to take out from this transformer ? You can use either single 12 volts winding for out put or you can use 24 volts (end to end of secondary) but you can connect two 110 volts primary in series (as a practical use) while taking output from one transformer, as said by betwixt, you may get your circuit harmed.
What supply voltage you are planning to take out from this transformer ? You can use either single 12 volts winding for out put or you can use 24 volts (end to end of secondary) but you can connect two 110 volts primary in series (as a practical use) while taking output from one transformer, as said by betwixt, you may get your circuit harmed.