Guest
I already understand how the turns ratio between primary and secondary
of a transformer translates into the voltage ratio. What I would like
to understand is why this works this way.
Consider a simple 1:1 transformer. I'll get the same voltage out on
the secondary as I input on the primary. Now if I add some turns to
the secondary, I get more voltage. But if I add some turns to the
primary, I get less voltage out on the secondary. This can obviously
be seen by turning the transformer around and applying power to what
was the secondary, and getting more voltage out on the primary when
the primary has more turns.
What I want to know is how it accomplishes this. I would think that
if I add more turns on the primary, I'm going to get more magnetic flux
in the core. Or is this simply not the case?
When answering this, please try to avoid falling back to turns ratio
itself, since I am accepting that already, though on faith (because it
can be observed to work). I'm trying to understand _why_ it works.
Along these lines I have other questions, and the answer to these may
even help understanding the above.
Turns ratio is one thing (establishes the voltage ratio). But how is
the actual number of turns to be determined (e.g. what factors will it
depend on)? I'm sure that if I build a transformer with a nice solid
iron core and wrap 2 turns on the primary with some nice thick 0 gauge
wire, and wrap 4 turns on the secondary, and plug it in, I'm going to
get a blown fuse or tripped breaker, instead of double the voltage out
on the secondary (well, maybe it will be for an instant).
Suppose I have a given transformer with room to add more windings to
both primary and secondary, and I add an equal proportion to both so
the ratio stays the same. What does that do to the capacity of the
transformer?
I've seen the internal windings on a 1000 KVA transformer, and it just
didn't look like much. They were thick, but not that many. It just
seemed like it would "nearly short out" whatever power was applied to
either primary or secondary. Or is it the case that this sizing is
also going to translate into the waste factor of a transformer (e.g.
the waste in a 1000 KVA transformer with a 120/240 volt primary would
be more than a normal home 15/20 amp circuit would take)?
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Phil Howard KA9WGN | http://linuxhomepage.com/ http://ham.org/ |
| (first name) at ipal.net | http://phil.ipal.org/ http://ka9wgn.ham.org/ |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
of a transformer translates into the voltage ratio. What I would like
to understand is why this works this way.
Consider a simple 1:1 transformer. I'll get the same voltage out on
the secondary as I input on the primary. Now if I add some turns to
the secondary, I get more voltage. But if I add some turns to the
primary, I get less voltage out on the secondary. This can obviously
be seen by turning the transformer around and applying power to what
was the secondary, and getting more voltage out on the primary when
the primary has more turns.
What I want to know is how it accomplishes this. I would think that
if I add more turns on the primary, I'm going to get more magnetic flux
in the core. Or is this simply not the case?
When answering this, please try to avoid falling back to turns ratio
itself, since I am accepting that already, though on faith (because it
can be observed to work). I'm trying to understand _why_ it works.
Along these lines I have other questions, and the answer to these may
even help understanding the above.
Turns ratio is one thing (establishes the voltage ratio). But how is
the actual number of turns to be determined (e.g. what factors will it
depend on)? I'm sure that if I build a transformer with a nice solid
iron core and wrap 2 turns on the primary with some nice thick 0 gauge
wire, and wrap 4 turns on the secondary, and plug it in, I'm going to
get a blown fuse or tripped breaker, instead of double the voltage out
on the secondary (well, maybe it will be for an instant).
Suppose I have a given transformer with room to add more windings to
both primary and secondary, and I add an equal proportion to both so
the ratio stays the same. What does that do to the capacity of the
transformer?
I've seen the internal windings on a 1000 KVA transformer, and it just
didn't look like much. They were thick, but not that many. It just
seemed like it would "nearly short out" whatever power was applied to
either primary or secondary. Or is it the case that this sizing is
also going to translate into the waste factor of a transformer (e.g.
the waste in a 1000 KVA transformer with a 120/240 volt primary would
be more than a normal home 15/20 amp circuit would take)?
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Phil Howard KA9WGN | http://linuxhomepage.com/ http://ham.org/ |
| (first name) at ipal.net | http://phil.ipal.org/ http://ka9wgn.ham.org/ |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------