boylesg
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Any words of wisdom about this sort of thing before I consider giving it a go?
According to this, you can remove the secondary windings, add a new secondary winding of 10-20 turns of suitably amp rated cable and create a 12V power source that can deliver high amps.
Yes, that is true, You can find a lots of videos on YouTube portal about this, and usually people make spot welder with this transformer. This transformer cannot run a longer time with extra high power, core will be very hot. Check needed core sqaure area for power which You plan to use on longer time.
Example videos:
https://www.youtube.com/results?sea...9.5.0.0.0.0.0.0..0.0...0.0...1ac.1.11.youtube.
Best regards,
Peter
You can regulate primary winding with triac dimmer.
Best regards,
Peter
30A is big, but on trash day there is probably at least one
PC with an ATX power supply sitting by the curb along
your street (if you aren't willing to pay the $10-20 for
a used one at some PC repair shop). You could expect
somewhere between 10 and 20A capability, with no more
work than figuring out which low voltage supply needs
the dummy load, and which control wire needs grounded
to enable startup.
Laminates in iron core of transformer are used to limit Eddy currents. Without laminations, iron core would heat up very fast, with high waste of energy.
Best regards,
Peter
Which direction do these eddy current flow. From diagrams on the net and the fact that each individual lamination has to be varnished it appears that those eddy currents would flow from one lamination to the next if they weren't insulated.
So if you do a weld across the edges of the laminations, e.g. one at the top of the E and two on either side of join between the E and the I as with the MOT core I have at present, then why are you not undermining the insulation between the laminations?
30A is big, but on trash day there is probably at least one
PC with an ATX power supply sitting by the curb along
your street (if you aren't willing to pay the $10-20 for
a used one at some PC repair shop). You could expect
somewhere between 10 and 20A capability, with no more
work than figuring out which low voltage supply needs
the dummy load, and which control wire needs grounded
to enable startup.
Welding ?
Connect the green wire to ground, any of the 3 black wires next to it. Then connect a faulty harddisk or a lightbulb to +5v and ground and you have suddenly +5v @34 AMPS and +12Volts @manyamps for many moons. If the powersupply stops working, use a vaccum cleaner in the fan area. Lubricate the fan ballbearing and Thou will have a powersupply for many moons.
Which direction do these eddy current flow. From diagrams on the net and the fact that each individual lamination has to be varnished it appears that those eddy currents would flow from one lamination to the next if they weren't insulated.
So if you do a weld across the edges of the laminations, e.g. one at the top of the E and two on either side of join between the E and the I as with the MOT core I have at present, then why are you not undermining the insulation between the laminations?
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Is there any practical way to mitigate the sound they make? That would be rather irritating if you were using it as a power source as opposed to a spot welder.
As far as I'm aware of, microwave oven transformars are stray-field transformers. They aren't well suited for general transformer purposes.
Yes, if it's feasible.But if you remove the HV secondary and the shunts and add a new LV secondary then it becomes a standard transformer as far as I can see.
But not in the way discussed above, because the magnetical shunt is still in place. In fact, I'm not sure if it can be easily removed.Here is one example
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