I'm wiring a pedal that has 2 actual circuits in it. One of the circuits runs has tubes (hence the AC current), and the other is SS. The wall current goes through a transformer (which was specified with 12.6V secondaries, but in reality regulated the AC voltage to 14.3V) then to either the ac powered circuit or a rectifier circuit that changed the AC to DC voltage and cleans up any power ripples.ArtieToo said:Generally, the only way to convert one AC voltage to another is through a transformer. You aren't likely to find one with that particular ratio. What is your source, and what is your application?
Propper load? Artie, I'm not worthy of your wisdom!!!ArtieToo said:Did you measure that 14.3 with no load attached? That transformer may very well do 12.6 with a proper load. Try measuring it with a load. Be careful!![]()
That's what I assumed. It's a 1200ma transformer, and it's from -hold your breath- radioshack. I know, I know... electrician's worst nightmare. That's why I was quick to believe that the transformer was faulty. Radioshack's tolerance %'s on their stuff is terrible in some cases. This is just a diy project, so the transformer isn't meant for specifically this.ArtieToo said:Lets say you have a transformer that designed to run a pedal at 12 volts. If you measure its output when it isn't plugged into the pedal, it may well read 14 - 16 volts. Does the transformer you're using have a current rating on it? Like sometimes, they'll say 600ma, or 1200ma. That type of thing. Is this a wall-wart type of thing?
Is this a home-built system, or a commercial product? Was this transformer made for this particular system?
Haha, Good point. I just did some quick calculations... the voltage i need to give the circuit WITHOUT load is 13.8V AC roughly. With load, this drops down to about 12.6 V. Would running the 14.3V AC transformer cause much of a problem seeing as it would drop down to about 13.3V with the load? Thanks for your time again Artie!ArtieToo said:You could put a 10 ohm resistor across its output, and then measure it. The problem is, you need a really big, expensive one. Like in the 20 watt range. Even then, you'ld only want power on it for a moment or two. Just long enough to measure the output.
Really though, your 14.3 should be fine for a 12.6 volt project. The transformer will drop a little bit with a load.
Then again . . . I don't really want to tell you to hook A to B without knowing better what you're doing.
Long distance troubleshooting can get one of us fried. Probably be you. :blackeye:
Actually, it'd be only .6V. The amount that it's supposed to run on is 12.6, not 12 V. Anyway, thanks artie, you've helped me a ton!ArtieToo said:You're probably safe, but it's so hard to say without knowing exactly what you're doing. One and a half volts isn't a big deal in many circuits, but then again, I'm not sure what your circuit is.