I never did like transformer theory in my degree course and that was 40 years ago. I'm a boat builder now and we tend to have big battery banks and thus big chargers with all sorts of dodgy stuff going on. I have repurposed a series of power transformers to be used as the basis of high power (5KW) battery chargers. We have used things like old welder transformers and, more recently, 3.2KVA 240:110 site transformers.
We break open the yellow box, take out the trafo, strip down the laminations ("E" and "I"), rewind the bobbin (usually leaving the primary alone but invariably 160 turns (1.6mm diam wire) : 13 turns plus 13 (4 wires in parallel, 2mm diam)). The original windings are 160 : 40 + 40 and the CT is earthed. These seem to work well. We are finding that the original wire is enamelled aluminium but we wind with new enamelled copper.
The latest one is being problematic. The core was standard E & I but with all the Es aligned and all the Is aligned (ie not interleaved) and the joints between the E stack and the I stack were welded with a 1mm seam across the stack. I spent ages unpicking the core laminations then hammering down the little blobs (the residue of the weld). Re-wound, re-laminated (interleaved) and powered up for initial test. It seemed to work fine and produced the expected 19-0-19 output. But it started warming up. I then terminated the windings and powered up and it blew the fuse. I put on an ammeter and the ammeter said that it was drawing 56A off-load. I suspected that I had eddy current losses going on so I stripped the core down again and varnished all of the laminations (the corners where the weld had been were now shiny steel). Re-assembled, powered up to test and it blew the fuse again. Stripped the core down again and re-assembled not-interleaved and re-welded the joints between the Es and the Is. Powered up and again drew excess current, this time 62A. And blew the fuse.
Suspecting a shorted turn I cut the weld, stripped the core down again and unwound the windings (looking for burns or other evidence of shorts).
Not a sausage.
I am a bit perplexed that a transformer core, laminated so as to prevent eddy currents, is welded so as to short all the laminations thus promoting eddy currents...
But most of all I cant get my head around what is causing this massive excess current.
Any ideas?
We break open the yellow box, take out the trafo, strip down the laminations ("E" and "I"), rewind the bobbin (usually leaving the primary alone but invariably 160 turns (1.6mm diam wire) : 13 turns plus 13 (4 wires in parallel, 2mm diam)). The original windings are 160 : 40 + 40 and the CT is earthed. These seem to work well. We are finding that the original wire is enamelled aluminium but we wind with new enamelled copper.
The latest one is being problematic. The core was standard E & I but with all the Es aligned and all the Is aligned (ie not interleaved) and the joints between the E stack and the I stack were welded with a 1mm seam across the stack. I spent ages unpicking the core laminations then hammering down the little blobs (the residue of the weld). Re-wound, re-laminated (interleaved) and powered up for initial test. It seemed to work fine and produced the expected 19-0-19 output. But it started warming up. I then terminated the windings and powered up and it blew the fuse. I put on an ammeter and the ammeter said that it was drawing 56A off-load. I suspected that I had eddy current losses going on so I stripped the core down again and varnished all of the laminations (the corners where the weld had been were now shiny steel). Re-assembled, powered up to test and it blew the fuse again. Stripped the core down again and re-assembled not-interleaved and re-welded the joints between the Es and the Is. Powered up and again drew excess current, this time 62A. And blew the fuse.
Suspecting a shorted turn I cut the weld, stripped the core down again and unwound the windings (looking for burns or other evidence of shorts).
Not a sausage.
I am a bit perplexed that a transformer core, laminated so as to prevent eddy currents, is welded so as to short all the laminations thus promoting eddy currents...
But most of all I cant get my head around what is causing this massive excess current.
Any ideas?