Center tab on / off or, from +-5V to 0-10V

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I own a commercial center tapped variable power supply.
It is modular with 0 to 30V and 0 to 60 volts both being isolated.
Linked in series they will run a valve radio nicely on 90 volts.
 

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The two sections are 30V at one amp and 50V at 500ma.
I can connect them in series for running battery valve radios.
They have tapped transformers and complicated switching allowing lower voltages to be selected at higher current.
The outputs are center tapped with inside an extra heat sink with power transistors that maintain the center tap.
The main use would be for R&D using opamps requiring center tapped power supplies.
It has been one of my two main bench power supplies for many years.
 
The two sections are 30V at one amp and 50V at 500ma.
I can connect them in series for running battery valve radios.
They have tapped transformers and complicated switching allowing lower voltages to be selected at higher current.
The outputs are center tapped with inside an extra heat sink with power transistors that maintain the center tap.
The main use would be for R&D using opamps requiring center tapped power supplies.
It has been one of my two main bench power supplies for many years.
'It is something like that, that could be funny to build one day! :)
 
Lab supplies with dual outputs use a transformer with two isolated secondaries, each with a supply circuit.
The two V supplies can be connected in series for either 2V or else for +/-V. With some circuits the
two V supplies can also be paralleled for twice the current.

You can't use a transformer with a single center tapped secondary, unless you want the two supplies
to always be in series.
 
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Lab supplies with dual outputs use a transformer with two isolated secondaries, each with a supply circuit.
The two V supplies can be connected in series for either 2V or else for +/-V. With some circuits the
two V supplies can also be paralleled for twice the current.
Hmm yes that make sense but my idea is to be able to connect Right and Left channel so that I end up with -5V to +5V to i.e. an op-amp. Or have two +5V channels. I have let me tell that to do both, I have to use only one transformer.
 
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Joined 2011
Okay, yes greater costs, but you is there any advantages of using two instead of one,
beside can build two separate cabinets?

Most lab supplies are built with two floating supplies in one cabinet, more flexible and no disadvantages.
The better ones allow paralleling the two supplies also. Sometimes you need a floating supply that is
not referenced to ground.
 
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