Found this today. Do you know what it represents ?
I measured all the solder spots, but no more than several ohms.
http://img18.picoodle.com/img/img18/3/1/25/f_P1258047m_438d7f7.jpg
http://img19.picoodle.com/img/img19/3/1/25/f_P1258048m_530d7dd.jpg
http://img02.picoodle.com/img/img02/3/1/25/f_P1258049m_da2d878.jpg
http://img02.picoodle.com/img/img02/3/1/25/f_P1258050m_b1ea57e.jpg
I measured all the solder spots, but no more than several ohms.
http://img18.picoodle.com/img/img18/3/1/25/f_P1258047m_438d7f7.jpg
http://img19.picoodle.com/img/img19/3/1/25/f_P1258048m_530d7dd.jpg
http://img02.picoodle.com/img/img02/3/1/25/f_P1258049m_da2d878.jpg
http://img02.picoodle.com/img/img02/3/1/25/f_P1258050m_b1ea57e.jpg
Searched with google with no answers.
http://lampilich.narod.ru/trans/400TPPpar06.html
Found this from a friend.
http://lampilich.narod.ru/trans/400TPPpar06.html
Found this from a friend.
They used 400 Hz power on their ships and submarines. It makes for very small (equals lightweight) power transformers at a given VA rating. Unfortunately, you can't run these things on 60 Hz AC unless you de-rate the thing a lot. For all practical purposes, that transformer is useless.
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