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Re: X-ray trans circuitry question
Original poster: Jim Lux <jimlux-at-earthlink-dot-net>
Most Xray sources will also have a highly insulated transformer of some
sort (or combined with the main power transformer) to supply filament power
to the tube.
At 03:57 PM 3/3/2004 -0700, you wrote:
>Original poster: "Ben Ziegler" <crossguy-at-hotmail-dot-com>
>Last weekend's trip to the junkyard yielded the following large piece of iron:
>http://seras.math.uiuc.edu/~cjschult/tmp/tmp.html
>
> It's rated output is 60kv, 3.5kVA. I hope to use it as a Marx bank
> power source. I've never dealt with one of these beasts before. As far
> as I can tell, the hv tranny is supplied with conditioned 220V from the
> gold transformer (at the leads in the foreground of the center
> picture). The outer winding on the large core is connected via heavily
> insulated leads to the resistor network. Five additional inputs enter
> the picture here, two attached to the resistors, three go into one
> winding on the smaller core.
> The resistor bank is attached to a hv capacitor and the short winding on
> the small core. The short winding has two outputs hanging loose, which I
> assume are the final hv output. I'm also assuming the resistors,
> capacitor, the second core and windings are current limiting circuitry.
> I ask for help understanding the circuitry in the transformer. The
> resistor bank, for example, has some 'mystery' devices on it that I've
> never seen the counterpart to: a yellow plastic 'black box' with two
> leads, a couple of sealed glass tubes that resemble blown fuses or spark gaps?
>I will post a crude schematic once I figure some more out.
>
>thanks,
>Ben Ziegler
>--
>btw, the x-ray tube has been rendered inoperable post-photo.