I am now Annoyed [Re: Old oscilloscope help: ideas sought]
Tony Duell
ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk
Fri Mar 2 16:58:38 CST 2007
>
> [replying to two messages in the same thread together]
>
> >> I was using a 40W light bulb in series with the primary, as a
> >> current limiter, which is why the primary voltage was 25V instead of
> >> ~120V. The bulb was glowing (not quite full power, but close).
> > Well, even with a 40W bulb in series, I would expect a transformer
> > with no load on the secondaries to give almost full output if there
> > were not shorted turns.
>
> Well, yes - since it would be drawing (to a first approximation) zero
> current. That the bulb glows at all with all the secondaries open is
Not so. There will be an out-of-phase current due to the inductance of
the primary winding. And that current, if sufficiently large, would cause
the lamp to glpw
_But_ my experience suggests that for small-ish power transformers, the
sort of thing we're talking about here on no-load, a normal mains lamp in
series with the primary will not glow. You could trie a higher-wattage
bulb, thoguh.
IIRC, though, you've got a leak (or short) to earth from some point in
the HV widning, and another point on that winding (the centre-tap of the
B+ part) is deliberately earthed. That can't be right. And I'll bet that
short-to-reath is not just on one turn, in other words you also have
shorted turns there.
> >> Turns out the winding I thought was the HV winding, only shorted
> >> out, is actually the CRT filament/heater winding. (I'm quite sure
> >> I've got the CRT filament pins correct; they are the only two CRT
> >> pins that show DC continuity.)
> > It's always possible (you'd better hope not!) that there's an
> > internal inter-electrode short in the CRT.
>
> Unlikely. Those two pins show about three ohms resistance. I'd expect
SOunds like the heater...
>
> Then it probably is a heater, with that odd circuit serving some other
> purpose. (There is a "Z input" on the front panel, which is a
> brightness control; it is capacitively coupled to this possibly-cathode
> pin, which would make some sense....)
Sure. The Z-modulation input is an external brightness control input,
used for some special applications. In general it's capacitively-coupled
to either the cathode or control grid of the CRT.
>
> >> The HV winding appears intact, and runs between one side of the B+
> >> winding and the filament of one of the HV rectifiers;
> > That suggests to me a -ve EHT supply (output taken from the anode of
> > the rectifier).
>
> I now believe there is a -ve EHT supply and also a +ve EHT supply.
> There are two HV rectifiers; if I draw the rectifier valves as
> semiconductor diodes instead (to simplify the ascii-graphics), omitting
> their filaments for simplicity, the circuit looks something like:
>
> ===================
> .oooo.oooo.oooo.oooo. +--> resistor chain (see below)
> | | | | +--> one end of CRT heater
> | GND | | 100K | 220K
> | | | +--/\/\/\/---+--/\/\/\/--> CRT cathode(?)
> | | | +--|<--+ | .5uF/2KV 47
> +->|-+-|<-+ | | +---||--GND +---||---+--/\/\/\/--GND
> | +----+ .5uF/2KV +--/\/\/\/--3.15VAC
> | | .5uF/2KV 91
> | ==== +-->|---/\/\/\/--+-----||----GND
> | .oooo. 100K +--/\/\/\/--GND
> +--+ +--+ | 5M
> | +---------> CRT final anode
> +--> B++ +--> B+
> | |
> GND---)|--+--/\/\/\/-+-| . |---GND
> 80uF/475V 0B2
>
> (The unconnected final winding of the transformer is actually the
> filament winding for the rectifier whose cathode is shown connected to
^^^^^^^^
Don't you mean anode (plate to you) here?
> one end of that winding.)
> Add in the four deflection electrodes and this accounts for all but one
> of the connections to the CRT. That one is driven by a circuit I do
> not understand which appears to have something to do with the "Y LIN"
> internal adjustment - this may make more sense once I've traced more of
> the circuit.
It may well be an internal shield between the defleciton plates. Altering
the voltage on it wil lcontrol the shape of the beam-deflction .vs.
voltage between the defleciton plates characteriostic, thuse it will
LINearise the Y defleciton.
-tony
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