derek92994
Veteran and General Yakker
That is very unusual for a transformer...
Maybe those higher voltage caps? I don't see it as a problem, as I will be running the unit with the top off at all times, may even throw a fan near the transformer.
That is very unusual for a transformer...



Any other ideas on why the transformer would get that hot? I'd say its around 75c.
They get warm when they are loaded up. I think that dome phase issues can cause heat but Joe would know for sure.
Several ideas why:
Cheap transformer with lots of eddy, core and winding losses
Saturation, are you running a transformer at 50Hz that was only designed for 60 Hz?
Are you running it at the wrong input voltage than what it was designed for?
Cooled down real quick after recording stopped, running with power on at idle now.
You are not running it on one of those crappy UPSes are you?
Both my UPS died a week or two ago, batteries only last 3-4 years, they are also full sine wave. I'm running surge protection only now.
I don't care what the UPS maker advertises, unless you pay a lot, the UPSes are piecewise linear sine wave approximation units at best. The only thing I run on UPSes are line operated switching PSU's with PFC inputs on them because they don't care what you give them. On the other hand, 50-60 Hz transformers care a lot about the input being a real sine wave. We see data center class UPSes with crest factors as low as 1.1 from time to time...ouch!!
So you're saying its best to stick to UPS only with computers and leave the audio gear off them?
Absolutely, I never run any audio gear on a UPS.
I'll take your advice. I have been running all my audio gear through UPSes for about 4 years except the amplifiers, without any issues at all. Its more to save the gear from fast off/on black/brownouts. Turntables, Cassette decks, reel to reels, cd players, eqs, vhs/beta machines, even an old CRT TV, no issues ever.
Could there have been stuff going on that I didn't know about that may cause problems if I continue to run them through UPS when batteries are replaced?

Here are the specs of my high end UPS - APC Smart UPS SUA1500I
Output Power Capacity
980 Watts / 1500 VA
Max Configurable Power
980 Watts / 1500 VA
Nominal Output Voltage
230V
Output Voltage Note
Configurable for 220 : 230 or 240 nominal output voltage
Output Voltage Distortion
Less than 5% at full load
Output Frequency (sync to mains)
47 - 53 Hz for 50 Hz nominal, 57 - 63 Hz for 60 Hz nominal
Topology
Line Interactive
Waveform Type
Sine wave
Surge energy rating 480 Joules
Filtering: Full time multi-pole noise filtering : 0.3% IEEE surge let-through : zero clamping response time : meets UL 1449