Transformer failure modes

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I have a question - I have a 50VA frame transformer whose secondaries are 15V. After rectification this should be 21V (15*1.414) when the secondaries are loaded. Problem is, this transformer drops to 19.5V with a load that draws ~150mA from the secondary.

It's not my wiring, as I swapped in a similar transformer and that worked fine. However, when I was 'testing' the circuit to which the transformer was attached to, I did manage to fry a 3A diode in the discrete bridge rectifier (obviously I didn't have any fuse in the secondary. Yes I know, smack my hand :smash:) The transformer is rated at ~2A.

Could I have fried the transformer? I thought these things either worked or they didn't!

Any explanations?
 
Zodiac said:
I have a question - I have a 50VA frame transformer whose secondaries are 15V. After rectification this should be 21V (15*1.414) when the secondaries are loaded. Problem is, this transformer drops to 19.5V with a load that draws ~150mA from the secondary.


Hi,

After rectification this voltage is theoretically 15*1,41 (perfect sinusoidal shape and no voltage loss on diodes) WITHOUT any load.
Voltage drop depends of current, rectification type, diode type, caps value and transformer losses.
19,5V at 150mA is just OK.IMHO

Regards
 
With the transformer rated at 10% regulation, 15V no load, 13.5V full load, you would expect 2V DC drop due to loading effects. I guess you will also lose 0.6V or so from forward diode drop, so theoretically it could go down to 18.4V or so! Hmmm, the other transformer I swapped in was a torodial and rated at 300VA, which might explain the lack of loading effects....
 
Thanks all, I will remember the 1.1 to 1.2 rule. It is these things that are useful rather than 'the voltage after full wave rectification will be 1.414 * the output voltage, in AC RMS, of the transformer in question' stuff that you find in textbooks.

I will get an 18V transformer, 50VA to get my 15V DC out 🙂
 
If I have a load that uses 1A average current, and have a 1000µF filter cap, the average current and the peak current through the diode bridge will be about 1A.

If I increase the filter cap to 100,000µF with a 1A average load current the peak diode current could be close to 100A. The limit is only the DC resistance of the transformer winding.

If I was using 12,000µF with a 300VA transformer I would use a 25A bridge.

Another trap is fast, or Schottky diodes. While quiet, they have lower surge current ratings than regular diodes. A series resistor may be needed to prevent failure from repetitive surges as in the above example.
 
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