Jean Clochet
Well-known member
ej_whyte said:I'm confused what you mean about another 15k resistor across the secondary though, did you mean to put 150k? At the moment it is just the 15k output of the transformer with the 150k load across it, no 15k resistors :S
No, not another 150K. But DO leave the 150K in place.
You are expecting the impedance to be reflected up to about 15K
If this reflected voltage is loaded by it's same value (15K), we have a 15K into 15K divider. This is a 6dB attenuator. Or half of the initial voltage.
So:
ej_whyte said:do you mean use a pot as a means of finding out what the output Z is? So when the pot is applying 6dB attenuation, take it out the circuit and measure its resistance, and whatever that is should be the output Z?
Yes! exactly
ej_whyte said:With regards to taking the resistance across the shunt, shouldn't it be the 599Ω from all the input resistors and shunt in parallel, also in parallel with the 150k divided by 25 as it is reflected back to the primary?
150k/25=6k
1/ (1/599 + 1/6000) = 544.6Ω
No. You can't measure directly an impedance so the 150K load R /25 doesn't come into it. This merely reflects an input "impedance" (which, again, you can't measure directly ) of circa 6K to the primary. The secondary dcr does come into it but not enough to bother about here.
If it's convenient, disconnect the transformer primary connections from all this stuff and measure the shunt value. Then measure just the transformer dcr of the primary. I think you'll have a Eureka moment