ptonsparky
Tom
- Occupation
- EC - retired
What would be the voltage output of a small control transformer that is reverse fed? 480 applied to the 120 side. Roughly 1920, or does the 4:1 ratio hold up?
What would be the voltage output of a small control transformer that is reverse fed? 480 applied to the 120 side. Roughly 1920, or does the 4:1 ratio hold up?
It would burn up if you tried it. So, don't.
As any laptop/cellphone owner appreciates.This illustrates an advantage of higher frequencies in that transformers are smaller for a given rating.
The output of a small transformer with 480V applied to the 120V side would be smoke
Seriously: the 4:1 ratio starts to fall apart as the core gets saturated. You see more leakage flux and mutual coupling from primary to secondary, so the voltage ratio changes. On top of this the saturation of the core means more magnetizing current flows and there is more voltage drop in the primary. I would expect a short duration transient (until something fails or OCPD opens) with rather less than a 4:1 ratio.
-Jon
I believe he did try it and it didn't burn up.... Maybe I am incorrect
Not to take anything away from what the others have said, the short "theoretical" (i.e., in a perfect world with an ideal transformer) answer to your question is yes, the (now) secondary voltage would be approximately 1920 volts. Even if we (temporarily) disregard the influences of core saturation and the other things mentioned above, imposing 1920 volts on windings that are likely only rated for 600 volts should rather quickly cause leakage current from winding to winding. If none of the other things mentioned above had yet let out the smoke, that could do it all by itself.What would be the voltage output of a small control transformer that is reverse fed? 480 applied to the 120 side. Roughly 1920, or does the 4:1 ratio hold up?
The output of a small transformer with 480V applied to the 120V side would be smoke
Seriously: the 4:1 ratio starts to fall apart as the core gets saturated. You see more leakage flux and mutual coupling from primary to secondary, so the voltage ratio changes. On top of this the saturation of the core means more magnetizing current flows and there is more voltage drop in the primary. I would expect a short duration transient (until something fails or OCPD opens) with rather less than a 4:1 ratio.
-Jon
He already tried it, unintentionally, topic of another thread. It blew primary fuses immediately. After figuring out the problem and correcting it it still worked. An item connected to the secondary did fail though.