Re-posting a message that appears to be 'lost'.
Original mentioned a sketch - not attached in this case.
Hello Tim (and others):
Thanks for your reply (and particularly
your circuit Tim). Speaking generally the circuit you sent is similar
to others seen on VMARS (hope I got that right). Except: Your cct runs
at 25kHz, not a iron-core power transformer frequency.
So - for the moment - I changed my plan. (My purpose in posting on ARC-5 forum was to seek info. The system is working.)
I
will move the switching frequency to 25 or 50kHz. Up from ~100Hz (or
iron-core power transformer frequency). Still thinking xtal control for
the switching frequency.
I intend to use a driver circuit that
does not switch polarity of the winding instantly. The circuit here
inserts one "off" clock pulse interval between the reversal of polarity
in the transformer. With a small RC I can soften the sharpness of the
signal when each clock pulse switches off. My be un-necessary; time
(and a CRO) will tell.
Yesterday: I went to the local
electronics shop and bought x3 pot cores to wind the transformer.
Don't have the specs for this particular ferrite so I will engage in
some experimentation. I hope to tap the secondary to give 60-90-120V to
run the BC-454. I will begin with the same number of turns on the
primary winding shown in your circuit. The secondary will have fewer
turns.
Reading earlier postings about optimum B+ voltages I
understand I'm running well below the recommended 180 .. 250V but from
experience I can say a command set from the BC-45x series will work well on a 60V B+ supply.
I attached a sketch to the previous e-mail. It appears to have disappeared into that place where lost things are never seen again. Sketch is absent this time. Let's see if I make it this time ...
Leslie
PS: Here's an interesting observation. A moment ago I clicked 'send'. Mr. Google reminded me that I wrote "I attached a sketch ... " in the body of my text but no attachement was found. You know why. That suggests some 'automaton' is reading my mail. It appears nothing is private. Not even an innocent message about hobby electronics.