On Friday, I discovered a classified ad for some interesting power supplies and isolation transformers. I visited the guy on Saturday, and after drooling over the huge 15 kVA 3-Phase Solatron, I settled down to look at the 5kVA 240/120VAC Constant Voltage Transformers. He had two. I took one, and it's been totally fascinating to experiment with. I plugged the inputs to 120 VAC from the wall, and the X1-X2 output was bang-on 118V. The output from X1 to X3 was 238VAC. Its input normally draws nearly 15 Amps, even when not loaded.







At first I thought I could try feeding the house power through it to "smooth out" power spikes and brown-outs, but given the constant demand of 15A, I won't even try it. It also hums like a 200 pound bumblebee. Still, I can't quite figure out how it works: How can you vary the input voltage yet get a constant output voltage, without a control mechanism? When I look inside, I can see nothing but transformers and banks of capacitors. I'll be doing a bit of research on the machine to understand it better. I might learn some important stuff from this beast.
BTW, if anybody else wants one, the guy still has another, plus a bunch of phone company power supplies /w switching panels, and that giant Solatron, too. The Solatron may already be spoken for, but if that contact doesn't pan out, he'd really appreciate getting rid of it.
Solatron Line Voltage Regulator & Comm Power Supply - Calgary Electronics For Sale - Kijiji Calgary