I have a MF A100X which was purchased in a country with 240V AC.
I now live in Canada with 120V AC and would like to use the amp.
Appreciate if anyone can help with schematic to convert the voltage.
By the way, the backplane of the amp says 240V/120V and I have tried to run the amp with 120V... it works. Is it possible that the A100X has auto-voltage for 240-120????
thanks
P
I now live in Canada with 120V AC and would like to use the amp.
Appreciate if anyone can help with schematic to convert the voltage.
By the way, the backplane of the amp says 240V/120V and I have tried to run the amp with 120V... it works. Is it possible that the A100X has auto-voltage for 240-120????
thanks
P
I don't know the amp but a picture of the backplane and a shot of the transformer area could help.
Look inside for a switch marked 120/240. If it's there, you have the answer.
/Hugo
Look inside for a switch marked 120/240. If it's there, you have the answer.
/Hugo
PTH said:I have a MF A100X which was purchased in a country with 240V AC.
I now live in Canada with 120V AC and would like to use the amp.
Appreciate if anyone can help with schematic to convert the voltage.
By the way, the backplane of the amp says 240V/120V and I have tried to run the amp with 120V... it works. Is it possible that the A100X has auto-voltage for 240-120????
thanks
P
yup-it works,but how good?
anyway it will work with half voltage in PSU
agree with Netlist-look for switch,but change probably must be made with some soldering;
if you are not skilled in that, find some technician locally
I don't recall any switches the last time I looked inside. Soldering is no problem.
Will take another look inside, pics and post during the weekend.
Thanks
Will take another look inside, pics and post during the weekend.
Thanks
Hi PTH,
Look at the primary connections of the power transformer (4 wires or more). For 240 VAC they go in series. For 120 VAC they go in parallel. Phase is extremely important. If you are not 100% sure, have someone help you. The fuse value should be doubled I would think.
-Chris
Look at the primary connections of the power transformer (4 wires or more). For 240 VAC they go in series. For 120 VAC they go in parallel. Phase is extremely important. If you are not 100% sure, have someone help you. The fuse value should be doubled I would think.
-Chris
I took a look inside:
1: The toroid transformer has only 2 leads to the primary winding
2: on the transformer, there is a label which says 120- 240 V
3: there are no switches
4: and the secondary winding has only 3 leads
Thanks all for helping
1: The toroid transformer has only 2 leads to the primary winding
2: on the transformer, there is a label which says 120- 240 V
3: there are no switches
4: and the secondary winding has only 3 leads
Thanks all for helping
PTH said:I took a look inside:
1: The toroid transformer has only 2 leads to the primary winding
2: on the transformer, there is a label which says 120- 240 V
3: there are no switches
4: and the secondary winding has only 3 leads
Thanks all for helping
if there are no hidden primary leads you can do just this:
measure AC voltage of unloaded secondaries (cut or desolder secondary leads from rectifier)
then purchase 120VAC unit of MAXIMUM size which you can squeeze in box;just forget VA ratings and search for size
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- Amplifiers
- Solid State
- Musical Fidelity A100X Power supply