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Securing Torids - Click HERE for Original Thread
rabstg
Hi All-

I have bought some transformers from of Steve @ Apex.jr and am looking for the best method of mounting.

I see most torids have the "hubcap" plate to pinch the torid to the chassis but I was hoping to hear of other possibilities.

In my Jeff Rowland model 2 the two transformers are in a steel or lead tube and that is mounted to the chassis.

http://www.jeffrowland.com/m2pix.htm

By the way, my gainclone(brianGT's boards) is to look similar to my model 2.


I was thinking of putting the two torids in a box potted with epoxy? Then mount the box to the chassis.

Anyone do something like that? Or have pictures of "creative" mounting solutions?

Thanks in advance,

Troy

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OddOne
I don't think I'd suggest potting a toroidal transformer, as they will need to dissipate some heat while operating, especially at or near their rated output power limit.

That said, one trick I've seen employed is to mount the toroid via 3 to 6 straps or tiewraps looped through square tiewrap mounting pads. This has the advantages of flexing and not rattling and not reacting to the magnetic fields in and around the toroid core, but has the disadvantage of requiring more than just the two-sided foam tape the mounting pad come with.

oO
rabstg
So no-one has done anything unique for pwr supplies?
jhead
If you notice on the Plitron transformers they epoxy the center and then drill a hole thru the epoxy go to the peter danials thread on the gainclone chassis group buy and take a close look at the plitron transfomer mounting I think this is one of the best technics I've seen
Nuuk
quote:
So no-one has done anything unique for pwr supplies?

I made these....



It allows the transformer to be inside the amp but sitting on the equipment shelf with hardly any contact with the amp case. ;)
rabstg
Hey Nuuk-

Now you see that is neat. I hope to try something similar on my project also.

Is that nylon discs on the bottom? What material did you use, and why did you choose it?

Thanks in advance,

Troy
Nuuk
quote:
Is that nylon discs on the bottom? What material did you use, and why did you choose it?

I listened to many different materials for this job and found that this particular type of plastic sounded best :rolleyes:

OR

It was something that I had lying around and cost me nothing.

I'll let you guys decide which is the right answer! ;)
rabstg
Hey Nuuk-

Well reason I was curious on the material type was because I just saw this:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...item=3815940968

Would be perfect for gainclone troids but I think just a little pricy for our use.

Troy
Nuuk
The truth is that almost any fairly rigid material will do Troy and in my book, the less it costs, the better ;)

Of course, the base will just show under the amplifier so I would not favour plywood for instance. The pieces of polycarbonate (I think that is what I used) were dumped from a local factory and I got to them before the garbage men!

After two years I am still awaiting the next 'dumping'. :bawling:
rabstg
Actually I won the auction for these Teflon disks.

I will experiment with putting my transformers on them and attaching the chassis spike to the bottom part of the bolt to isolate the troids from the chassis completely.

I won 23 disks so I have LOTS to experiment with.

For my first GC amp the pwr supps will be external, but I hope to eventually make a single chassis stereo unit with pwr supps in the same box where these "may" make a difference.

Troy


edit: added "where these "may" make a difference" so the inclusion of future plans has some relevance.
cowanrg
i knew a guy that used plastic cutting boards. he would use a hole-saw and cut out washers, plates, etc... you can get these cheap plastic cutting boards for really cheap.

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