Transformer got really hot because I wired it wrong

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I am tempted to make a sock puppet account just to avoid having this idiocy forever tied to me, but ah well.

I have a 50va 2x115:2x12v Noratel toroid transformer that I clearly wired wrong. It took me some time to figure out that while I was not getting the meter readings I expected, the transformer was busily getting itself very hot.

So of course I panicked and pulled all the wires and can't see precisely how I had it connected. What I want is to get 24 volts out of it, so I tried to connect the secondaries in series.

Primary: blue (dot) - grey, violet (dot) - brown.
These I connected brown to grey, violet to blue.

Secondary: black (dot) - red, orange (dot) - yellow
These it looks like I connected orange to red, then took the power from black and yellow. But I'm guessing based on tape residue.

Naturally my confidence has been shaken since, but it's been a few days and I have a hankering to do some soldering. I would really appreciate any advice anyone can offer.

Thanks!
 
then the transformer was connected to something. atleast a rectifier and caps.
just trying to figure out where the foult is. try the transformer alone. don't connect the secondaries to anything. just don't short it out :)
before fireing up the transformer, measure resistance of each primary windings and each secondaries windings.
 
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With brown-grey and violet-blue, I see 14 ohms across the joined pairs.

With brown, grey, violet and blue separated, I see 24.9 ohms across brown and violet, and 25 ohms across grey and blue.

With orange-red, I see 1.1 ohms across yellow and black.

With orange and red separated, I see .7 ohms across orange and yellow, and 0.7 ohms across black and red.

To me, it still looks like I hooked it up right. So by process of elimination, I screwed up putting the board together. Or I should pick another hobby...
 
Of course it's possible I put it all together properly, but I blew something up because I selected the wrong transformer. This is a Glassware LV-Regulator kit, which I am using in a full wave bridge configuration. It uses an LD1085 and the instructions say to not expose it to a voltage differential of 30v.

24 rectifies to 34 volts, and I want 12 volts out, so I figured that's a differential of 22 volts or so. But maybe that's not what it means, and something is toast because of it.
 
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