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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.repair,alt.security.alarms
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![]() "Danny D'Amico" wrote in message news ![]() On Tue, 26 Nov 2013 23:01:57 -0500, tm wrote: That's normal. The secondary winding is floating. Whew! I had expected a center-tapped transformer or something. Thanks for setting my mind at ease on the odd voltages to the ground lead. The 20Volts I measured is probably because the RMS voltage must be the 16.5Volts, so *that* part at least makes sense. What voltage do you see across the aux terminals (DC) with the transformer connected to the alarm board? I measured 13.61 volts across the DC terminals with the AC transformer in place. That seems good, to me, if a bit low for charging a 12V battery. http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7440/1...deb1394f_o.gif Get a fuse in line with the secondary to save the transformer in case something is shorted. The transformer has a PTC fuse in the secondary. But, I *do* agree with you. I'm shocked there is no fuse. I even asked at the intrusion alarm houses I visited today. They said the board itself is protected from overloads, so, nobody bothers with a fuse. This reminds me of the situation with garage door torsion springs where the "industry" puts in the cheapest spring saving *them* ten bucks, but if you put in your own spring, you *always* opt for the better (longer life) spring! For me, I agree with you. I'm heading off to RadioShack or Frys to get an inline fuse holder. You don't want to damage the new transformer. I would use a fuse equal to the secondary current rating marked on the transformer. It's a 16.5VAC (RMS) output, with a power of 45VA, so, given I=P/V, I get I=45/16.5, where I is 2.7 Amps. So, how does double that sound for a fuse, e.g., roughly around 5 Amps for the inline fuse for the transformer secondary? You will measure 16.5 volts RMS AC when the load is 45 VA. Use a 3 amp fuse. Can you check the current draw with your meter on AC Amps? Just for reference. |
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