Help Convert Rotel Amp 220v to 110v? SEE PICS

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Hi Guys, wondering if you could give me a hand here. I picked up an old Rotel RA-820 stereo integrated amp second hand. Unfortunately for me in the USA, it's wired for 240v mains. The instruction manual mentions that this amp ships with different voltages for different destinations. Can anyone take a look at at the pics and tell me if it is possible to wire the PT for 120v lines?


HERE IS THE LINK TO THE PICTURES

http://members.cox.net/ted007ted/jbl/rotel.html

The blue and white wires are the primary side of the transformer. No markings on the unit or the transformer as to what the taps are. I tried googling Bando but did not come up with anything. Also there is no switch on the back to select voltages. I know I could buy a step up transformer, but the idea of changing the wiring is much more attractive. I searched this forum and read all the posts I could find, but no luck. Any advice is grately appreciated.

Many Thanks,
Ted
 
Richard, I was able to convert the amp, listening to it now. You can not use the same method because you don't want to apply 240v at the 120v tap. Assuming that your transformer has multiple taps so it can be used at 120v, you can try this. Turn the unit OFF. With a decent multimeter, measure the resistance between the nuetral tap and the hot taps on the transformer's primary side (the side that connects to the wall socket). You should see resistance double as you go along the taps on the transformer. Then simply resolder the wire to the doubled resistance.
 
can i plug the unit in?

Hi Ted

Thing is i can't plug the unit in can i? What happens if i plug a 110V unit into a 230V supply?

I'll get a multimeter and try what you said...so its not the little clips that need moving its the wires coming from the switch? Normally you move the little clips around on the busbar...see my post Accuphase E307 for photos.

Will try some things out today!

Richard
 
my findings

So...i bought a multimeter and tested the resistance between the neutral and the hot primary side...however there seem to be many wires coming from the transformer so i don't know which ones should be in which combination!

So now i wait to get a 110V transformer so i can power the unit that way and then test the wires to see where the 240V comes out....if you look at this photo, connected to the hot side is a violet wire...now i think that stays there but on the neutral side i think a couple of wires get swapped.....not sure if it requires two or one wire to make it run in parallel or series?

Attached a photo of current 100V config!

Richard
 

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