Fried Output Transformer??

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Aaron
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Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Aaron »

Hi Everyone,

I think i've fried my output tranny. Just finished a new build, thought I had double checked everything before turning on. And when I did, output valves made a weird sound and got an instant electric smell.

Shut it off straight away. Triple checked and noticed that I had wired the C.T and an Anode wire the wrong way round :cry: :cry:

Swapped it over and turned it on, with no valves in, no burning smell voltages are fine. Plug in valves and get a weird static sound and voltages don't measure (my meter only goes to 600V DC).

Have I sent it to it's grave? Is there a way to test with out the valves in?

I wouldn't mind so much if it was a new tranny, but it was out of a '72 100W Marshall Super Lead :cry: :cry: :cry:

Any info would be much appreciated.

Thanks,

Aaron
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martin manning
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by martin manning »

First I'd try measuring DC resistance of both sides of the OT primary (should be within ~10% of each other), and deck for a shorts from all windings to each other and to the core steel. If those tests are ok then you could try a test for shorted turns like this: http://www.premierguitar.com/articles/t ... r-tester-1
If that checks out then maybe your problem is somewhere else. I don't know why the OT couldn't stand being connected that way for a short time.
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Blackburn
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Blackburn »

If you measure the resistance on both sides of the primary to CT (Amp off, unplugged) and they measure relatively close, it may be okay. That's what I've been told and is an easy way to check.
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Phil_S
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Phil_S »

I'm sorry to say, that smell is usually a bad sign, but there is always a chance you got lucky. You can do some tests to see if it is the OT or the tubes. I'd test the OT and if it checks out, I'd assume it is one or both tubes that went bad.

To check the OT there are several things you can do. Pull the output tubes and leave the power off. Discharge the caps.

1) Simple Ohm's test: lift (desolder) the CT from the power supply. Check the Ohms reading on the primary from each outer leg (plate connection) to the CT. They should be approximately the same. If they are equal or very close to equal, that's a good sign. A slight variance between sides is normal. Add the numbers together and then for good measure check the Ohms across the two outer legs and you should get the sum of the halves (or darn close). If any read open or infinite, you probably have the answer you don't want, but we all have to face facts.

2) Check the secondary winding, too. It will be a very low number of Ohms. Just make sure it isn't open or infinite.

3) If the primary passes on #1, you can test for turns ratio. Pull all tubes Use the filament supply from your PT to apply 5VAC or 6.3VAC to the OT secondary and see what the AC voltage appears on the primary. You can use jumper from the filament supply on the tube sockets to power the OT secondary. If the voltage checks out OK, your OT is probably OK.

I'm not sure what the OT ratios are for this piece of iron, but roughly, lets assume it is a 4K primary and 4-8-16 ohm secondaries. The turns ratio is the square root of the impedance ratio. So sqrt(8000/4) = 44.7:1; 8 ohm tap will be 31.6:1 and 16 ohm tap will be 22.4:1. Assuming 5VAC input, expect output of 224VAC, 158VAC, or 112VAC for 16, 8, and 4, respectively. If you don't know the primary impedance, these are OK ballpark numbers. If you know the primary impedance, adjust the expected results accordingly.

4) If it passes the turns ratio test, you really need to look for internal shorts with this thing: http://www.premierguitar.com/articles/p ... r-tester-1

Edit: I'm slow...I see Martin get there first with #4.

Good luck with this.
pdf64
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by pdf64 »

Plug in valves and get a weird static sound and voltages don't measure
If measuring plate voltage, putting the meter probe on to it may start the amp oscillating, causing weird readings.
Try just fitting the power tubes.
What static current are they drawing?

I don't see that the initial mixed up connection should have caused significant damage.
Maybe it oscillated heavily and warmed up the screen grid resistors?
Do they measure ok?
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martin manning
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by martin manning »

Phil_S wrote:1) Simple Ohm's test: lift (desolder) the CT from the power supply. Check the Ohms reading on the primary from each outer leg (plate connection) to the CT.
No need to disconnect the CT. The plate leads are not connected to anything so you can get a good resistance measurement with the CT connected.
Firestorm
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Firestorm »

As Martin said, if that's all you did, I can't see how the OT would hate it enough to die. It would just be an oddly designed SE. Did you put signal in it?

But a quick burning smell suggests a short somewhere. Anything else miswired?
Tillydog
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Tillydog »

The 'Light bulb limiter' is cheap insurance....

[/broken record] :wink:
Aaron
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Aaron »

Thanks for the info! I'll check after work.

Aaron
Aaron
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Aaron »

Okay, did a quick check on the primary and secondary.

Primary
C.T white - Anode red:- 17.9 ohms
C.T white - Anode brown:- 16.2 ohms
Anode red - Anode brown:- 33.1 ohms

Secondary
1.3 ohms on each output

I measured the Twin Reverb transformer that I replaced it with and measured just over double the readings, 36.7 ohms and 39 ohms and 1.4 on the secondary.

I did a continuity test with the multimeter and had no shorts, but will do the premier guitar test later tonight.

Aaron
Aaron
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Aaron »

Here is a schematic and picture.

When taking the picture I noticed that the 6k8 resistor in the power supply looked a bit burnt. It still measures fine though.

The choke measures 100 ohms.

Aaron
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Phil_S
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Phil_S »

I think those readings seem reasonable. There is hope of no damage. Do the neon bulb test for internal shorts to be sure.
Aaron
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Aaron »

Well, its official...........

I'm gonna go out on a limb here.........

I would have to be the stupidest, slowest, half wit moron you will ever meet!

Wired the common of the secondary to the output of the ohm selector switch. So the output was hard wired together :oops: :oops: :oops:

Got sound now, but hopefully no damage done.
Although thanks so much for the help/suggestions/ideas. You're all winners!!!!!

Now onto the next issues.......
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M Fowler
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by M Fowler »

We all make mistakes glad you found the problem and the amp lives. :)
Firestorm
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Re: Fried Output Transformer??

Post by Firestorm »

Aaron wrote:Well, its official...........

I'm gonna go out on a limb here.........

I would have to be the stupidest, slowest, half wit moron you will ever meet!

Wired the common of the secondary to the output of the ohm selector switch. So the output was hard wired together :oops: :oops: :oops:

Got sound now, but hopefully no damage done.
Although thanks so much for the help/suggestions/ideas. You're all winners!!!!!

Now onto the next issues.......
Something burned, tho. Can you tell what?
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