C
Chris Jones
Guest
hihihi wrote:
problem. The only thing that I would be concerned about is if the
insulation on the wire were to fail, and that can even happen in new
transformers.
Once the transformer has been completely dried out, then I think that it
will not suffer any significant further deterioration.
Chris
I think that a small amount of rust on the core is not likely to be aChris Jones wrote:
I think that heating to low temperatures (40 deg C) for a long time will
not necessarily dry the transformer well, especially if the humidity of
the
environment is high (e.g. in an outdoor greenhouse or a gas oven). Also,
the warm temperature may accelerate the corrosion cause by the water
(e.g. the iron core).
I just opened one trafo to the core.
There was water in the secondary and primary windings.
I have no way of knowing how long the trafos have been wet.
There is rust on the metal core.
This is a normal webcam picture of the core with rust.
http://home.wanadoo.nl/vroemm/temp/snapshot-20070821-101731.png
This is the same picture, but improved with gthumb -> image -> equalize
http://home.wanadoo.nl/vroemm/temp/snapshot-20070821-101731-eq.png
I must assume the other 15 trafos can have the same or more rust.
My trust in the trafos is getting low.
It looks wise to me NOT to use the trafos.
Unless someone has a good reason why it is safe to use them for the long
term.
problem. The only thing that I would be concerned about is if the
insulation on the wire were to fail, and that can even happen in new
transformers.
Once the transformer has been completely dried out, then I think that it
will not suffer any significant further deterioration.
Chris