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newcomer
2 years ago

You can also operate it with other waves, but the square is not transferred 1:1 but rounded. That would create heat at the transformer.
In the time when, so to speak, the square is horizontal, failure breaks tension secondary because at the time the magnetic flux does not change

newcomer
1 year ago
Reply to  newcomer

thank you for the star 😉

Machtnix53
1 year ago
Reply to  newcomer

According to my understanding, the current increases with constant voltage, i.e. also the magnetic flux. It would therefore be appropriate to feed a rectangle voltage or a rectangle current.

One problem, however, is the switching processes which induce high voltage peaks. As high as they are, the secondary load would again be applied.

Hikker
2 years ago

It is also possible to take a rectangle shaft (if the reef should be omitted), or a sawtooth shaft or a trapezoidal shaft. In any case, which deviates from the sine wave, however, the efficiency will decrease, and in rectangle waves, rather bad harmonics are triggered.

Nelson100
2 years ago

Squarewave should mean rectangle vibration. Fucking anglizisms.

The transformer is indifferent. There are no clean rectangular vibrations anyway, but there are overshooting sinusoidal vibrations.