martin manning wrote: ↑Wed Aug 18, 2021 7:54 pm
Using a hardware store AC line voltage tester (which is a neon bulb with a resistor in series) I was able to get a good flash on the primary and on the the HV secondary, but nothing from the 5V or 6V filament windings. Power was from bench supply set at 9VDC and 1A.
As always, there are a string of details on any test. Would you mind running that test again, leaving the hardware store neon across the primaries? I suspect that loading and opening the 5V and 6V windings will cause a flash then.
The asterisks and footnotes matter here. If you have a 120vac primary and a 6V secondary, there's a 20:1 ratio of voltages in the windings. The pulse inductance test loads up the core with the DC current times the number of turns, and then when you interrupt the current, the core tries to force the same current to keep flowing. All turns inside the windings experience the same volts per turn even on inductive discharge, so the voltage on the primary is still 20X the voltage on a 6V winding. If the voltage to be observed is the break over voltage of an NE2 or about 90V, then the primary is going to show 1800V. There are some windings where the self capacitance can damp that down enough to keep a neon from breaking over. Leaving the neon on a high voltage winding will give the same go-no-go test, as an internal short clamps all the turns to the same low voltage as well. So the neon would flash if left on the primary.
Actually, now that I'm thinking about it, you don't have to test all the windings. Just the primary or HT will do. An internal short ought to clamp all the turns to the same voltage, so a single test on the primary or ht will tell you whether you have a shorted turn.
I do wonder if the hardware store line tester is actually a neon these days. I bet it's cheaper to do an LED plus something or other than to secure a reliable supply of neons. I haven't tried to buy NE2s in over a decade. Still working on my last baggie of them.
"It's not what we don't know that gets us in trouble. It's what we know for sure that just ain't so"
Mark Twain