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Arfa Daily Arfa Daily is offline
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Default component identification --- follow-up


"Smitty Two" wrote in message
news
In article ,
Smitty Two wrote:

In article ,
"Arfa Daily" wrote:

"Smitty Two" wrote in message
news Please tell me whether this is an inverter or a bridge rectifier, if
you
recognize it out of circuit context.

http://members.cox.net/prestwich/51.jpg

Selenium stack bridge, by the looks of it. Equipment it's in ?

Arfa


Ancient European slide projector with rotary carousel. Trying to help a
friend get the thing going again, via email since he lives in another
city.

Problem with it is that this motor:

http://members.cox.net/prestwich/52.jpg

turns very slowly.



All right then, here's what happened with this. (Recall that the motor
is 240VAC and has a secondary winding to power some simple DC stuff
through the bridge) My friend disconnected the AC supply to the
rectifier, and presto, the motor returned to normal speed.

Thinking something downstream could be drawing too much current, he
reconnected the rectifier supply wires and then disconnected the DC side
of the rectifier. Motor slowed down. So he replaced the rectifier, and
all is well.

But I'm still puzzled, and since I was never on-site I didn't do any of
the tests myself. If the rectifier had some fault that was drawing too
much current and it pulled the voltage down, how could he have measured
240 on the slow-turning motor, and 17VAC / 12VDC on the rectifier?


As it was a selenium stack, I would suspect that one arm was leaky. Enough
to make it draw excess current, but not enough to represent a 'serious'
failure that would load up the supply really hard - such as happens when one
arm of a silicon bridge fails short circuit. With the other three arms
functioning normally, the result may well have been a DC output sufficient
for the rest of the circuitry to work.

Out of interest, did your friend replace with a silicon bridge, and
re-measure the AC in / DC out voltages ? Looking again, assuming that a
resevoir cap follows the rectifier, with 17v AC in, you would expect to see
around 24v DC at the output, rather than the 12v that was apparently
measured with the defective bridge in place.

Arfa