I've always used a junk box transformer and fed the 5V or 6.3V AC
secondary into the primary of the hv transformer / dc supply and
measured the exact AC input and the exact DC output.
I then measure the exact mains volts, divide that by the low primary
volts that I previously recorded.
Then I simply multiply that result by the dc output I measured to get
my final, no load hv reading.
The most dangerous part of the exercise is the measurement of the
mains AC voltage.
No need for a hv probe. Just a mains rated multimeter.
73, Alek.
VK6APK
At 01:03 PM 17/08/2009, MIKE DURKIN wrote:
>I liked that idea so much .. i tried it ...
>I ran my amp off of 120V(125V actually) instead of 240V and the
>lowest cap had 196V across it. ok that means that at 240V it would
>be running at the max rated supply voltage ( it only has 400V caps -
>bummer - HL-2k and P9306UL's yokagawa schematics call for 500V-umm
>what gives??) 3136V calc'ed
>
>Might add another 330uf@400V for safe measure since iv got it open ...
>
>KC7NOA
>
> > Subject: [Amps] HV Measuring.
> >
> > G'day all....I am probably the dill of the bunch but to measure the HV
> > on my power supplies I measure between the bottom capacitor in the stack
> > and ground...8 capacitors, multiply the result by 8 for the HV...Maybe a
> > bit rough and ready but safer than probing arount the HT end of the
> > stack....
> >
> > 73...Bob VK3ZL..
> > _______________________________________________
>
>_________________________________________________________________
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