Has anyone seen this...?
I'm troubleshooting an appartment 3-wire intercom.
The power supply is a 115 volt to 16 volt AC-AC wall transformer (according to the writing on the module).
When I disconnect the transformer and observe the secondary (16 volt nominal) voltage on my o-scope, it does not look sinusoidal. Instead, it looks "trapezoidal" -- straight line ramp up and down, and flat tops at around +/- 24 volts (say 48 volts p-p). (I should have taken a photo before reinstalling but didn't). I think the flat tops were maybe 50% or less of the cycle.
I thought maybe core saturation, but descriptions usually showed other kinds of distortion like spikes and rapid drop to zero when the core saturates. This waveform just clips, like an amp hitting its rails.
Does anyone know what this is?
Is it possible there is an overvoltage protection circuit inside the wall wart in case the transformer goes bad (like zener diodes, etc)? I suppose it is possible some primary windings shorted causing less of a step-down ratio or something like that.
-SB
I'm troubleshooting an appartment 3-wire intercom.
The power supply is a 115 volt to 16 volt AC-AC wall transformer (according to the writing on the module).
When I disconnect the transformer and observe the secondary (16 volt nominal) voltage on my o-scope, it does not look sinusoidal. Instead, it looks "trapezoidal" -- straight line ramp up and down, and flat tops at around +/- 24 volts (say 48 volts p-p). (I should have taken a photo before reinstalling but didn't). I think the flat tops were maybe 50% or less of the cycle.
I thought maybe core saturation, but descriptions usually showed other kinds of distortion like spikes and rapid drop to zero when the core saturates. This waveform just clips, like an amp hitting its rails.
Does anyone know what this is?
Is it possible there is an overvoltage protection circuit inside the wall wart in case the transformer goes bad (like zener diodes, etc)? I suppose it is possible some primary windings shorted causing less of a step-down ratio or something like that.
-SB
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