Dear DIYers,
I have transformer from Marantz PM-5. Amp does not exist anymore, but transformer can be good donation to my new project.
Unfortunatelly - cannot find explanation of any wire. There are (I think so) 5 secondary windings, one primary. On hifi engine - manual is OK, but no color explanation which can be navigation what is what.
Perhaps here you can help me. I will measures all values, but need only primary detection.
On transformer are two labels:
TS1961402-0 and ETP96HS1A
Regards, thank you,
Boris
I have transformer from Marantz PM-5. Amp does not exist anymore, but transformer can be good donation to my new project.
Unfortunatelly - cannot find explanation of any wire. There are (I think so) 5 secondary windings, one primary. On hifi engine - manual is OK, but no color explanation which can be navigation what is what.
Perhaps here you can help me. I will measures all values, but need only primary detection.
On transformer are two labels:
TS1961402-0 and ETP96HS1A
Regards, thank you,
Boris
Last edited:
The manual I have shows the primary as a single voltage. Given that all the other windings have at least 3 wires it should be easy to identify the primary... it would be the one with continuity between two wires only.
Perhaps posting a picture showing your transformer and its leads might help. Also always use a low wattage bulb tester when trying to identify an unknown device.
Perhaps posting a picture showing your transformer and its leads might help. Also always use a low wattage bulb tester when trying to identify an unknown device.
Attachments
I suppose that two white wires are connected to fuses on primary, but what with green one?
This is different from the manual, so it's best to ask someone who owns this unit to post a photo
of how it is connected. Could be dual primaries (the blue and white wires, and a green shield wire.
The two primaries must be carefully ohm-ed out and phased properly.
Also there's the question of which group of 3 wires goes where. They are not likely interchangeable.
Last edited: