I got a "vintage tube transformer" off Ebay.
It has cloth wire insulation, closed endbells, lay-down style (one endbell sits in the chassis). Weighs maybe 3lb.
There are 3 primary taps, the middle is 50% so I assume PP use (not SE ultralinear or SE multiple taps)
There are FIVE secondary taps... Black, brown, green, yellow, orange. I did AC voltage testing to find impedance ratios, and assumed black was common/ground.
If I assign each tap a common ohm value to reflect a similar primary impedance, I get:
Blk: Common
Brn: 1 ohm to 3.9k
Grn: 4 ohm to 4.6k
Yel: 8 ohm to 5.3k
Org: 16 ohm to 4.3k
All "close enough" loads to arrive at 4.5k primary impedance, considering I'm measuring with a cheap DMM.
But a 1 ohm tap is unusual. Maybe it's for feedback or something?
Let's look at it "backwards"...
Org: Common
Yel: 2 ohm to 4k
Grn: 4 ohm to 3.9k
Brn: 8 ohm to 3.9k
Blk: 16 ohm to 4.3k
Huh, those are VERY close to 4k primary impedance! Even better, a 2 ohm tap is something I was expecting.
But black usually is common/ground. And if yellow/orange are supposed to be the end of the winding for 8 to 16 ohm use, maybe they can't handle all that power (current) between them in 2 ohm use.
Not that it matters. I breadboarded it with 6V6s and it sounded great playing audio, I plan to make it a music amp with EL84s. I'll either "mismatch" the speaker to boost impedance or accept reduced power/increase plate dissipation. I won't be playing it full-blast anyways. Based on my assumption that the primary is 4.5k and speakers only go up to 16 ohms, this OPT shouldn't mind any of this, since it's probably designed for EL34s, 6L6s, etc, which provide double or more power output.
I'm just curious if anybody knows how this was expected to be used. Or if you approach unknown transformers differently from how I've done it.
Thanks in advance!