Re: CBM610 PSU - 220V or 110V?

From: Gerrit Heitsch <gerrit_at_laosinh.s.bawue.de>
Date: Sat, 30 Mar 2013 21:47:33 +0100
Message-ID: <51574F65.6050301@laosinh.s.bawue.de>
On 03/30/2013 09:19 PM, Hoffmann-Vetter, Martin wrote:
>>
>> At you transformer is a part number 324459-02 and the (german)
>> manufacture Zollner (Elektronik AG) in 8491 Zandt. (8491 is the old
>> zip code in Germany from the company.) The power unit from my 610 has
>> an other part number: 324459-01. All the prints on the transformer:
>>
>> (line) 3      P/N 324459-01      4 (brown)
>>                     EGM
>>             Made in  W. Germany
>>    (nc) 2   1 - 2   220V   50Hz   5 (black)
>>             1 - 3   240V   50Hz
>>             5 - 4    16V   1,9A
>> (line) 1   5 - 6    16V   1,9A   6 (brown)
>
> Now i found an other picture from a power unit for the CBM610 at http://www.vintage-computer.com/vcforum/attachment.php?attachmentid=12066&d=1361825351. (Yes, www.vintage-computer.com is online!)
>
> Here is the part number 324459-01, too. At the label on the transformer:
>
> (line) 3    P/N  325549-01     4
>                   1282B0
>            Deckert & Gaber oHG
>            Made in  W. Germany
>    (nc) 2   1 - 2  220V  50Hz   5
>             1 - 3  240V  50Hz
>             5 - 4   16V  1.9A
> (line) 1   5 - 6   16V  1.9A   6
>
> All known 220V/240V versions are part number 325549-01. So i would say, 325549-02 is a 110V version.

Should be easy enough to check. Measure the resistance of the primary 
coil on a known 220V transformer and then measure the suspect 
transformer. If it's 110V, the resistance should be lower.

  Gerrit





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