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flyingjwm007  
#1 Posted : Wednesday, January 26, 2011 3:47:28 AM(UTC)
flyingjwm007

Rank: Member

Groups: Registered
Joined: 1/26/2011(UTC)
Posts: 1

Trane 2 ton HP. Indoor unit contactor started buzzing and fluttering. Fan continued to run but outdoor unit and elcetric heat would not . Suspected 24 v T-former but voltage checked out. Replaced time delay and relay. With T-stat in heat mode and on emerg heat fan would run but no heater contactor engagement. 24 v going to electric heat contactor. Can hold contactor in and will heat. If T-stat is placed in normal mode, outdoor unit will cyle on for about one second and off and 24v t_former starts overheating as though a short is being applied. Question. 1. why would electric heat contactor not engage with 24v applied? 2. could t-stat be shorting. 3. Outdoor unit will run if its contactor is manually held in. 4. I diconnected all t-stat wiring to outdoor hoping to just have fan and electric heat. Fan runs but electric heat contactor will not engage. Can I assume that contactor is bad? The unit is a TWV025B104A mfgrd in 1996. All ran fine until the indoor relay started rattling and sparking. I suspect a short either in the t-stat or in the outdoor unit. I would be okay with just indoor fan and back up electric heat for now. Any suggestions.
Jerry
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icehouse  
#2 Posted : Wednesday, January 26, 2011 7:06:43 PM(UTC)
icehouse

Rank: Advanced Member

Groups: Senior Expert
Joined: 9/1/2008(UTC)
Posts: 440

Check your Transformers VA

Volt amps (VA) is the effective power rating for a transformer. In the perfect transformer, the voltage and current (combined) applied at the primary will exactly equal the voltage and current (combined) on the secondary(s).



Instructions


Things You'll Need:

  • Digital Multimeter (DMM)
  • Paper
  • Pencil
[LIST=1]
  • VA Calculation

  • Read the transformer's secondary winding rating (printed or tagged on the transformer case). This should give a rating such as 5 V , 500 mA.

    Multiply the voltage times the current to receive the VA.
    Ex: 5 V times 500 mA (or 0.5 A) equals 2.5 VA

  • Convert the secondary winding VA value to the primary winding VA rating as the equation VA (primary) equals VA (secondary) or VA (p) = VA (s).

    For the example of a 2.5 VA secondary, if the primary voltage is 120 V the current will be A (p) = VA (s)/V(p). Giving A(p) = 2.5 / 120 = 0.020833 (roughly 21mA).
    This is the calculation for a single input winding/single output winding transformer.
    Verify using DMM to read input voltage and current versus voltage at a given output current.

  • Add the separate VA ratings for a transformer with multiple secondary windings.
    For secondary winding 1 = 5 V at 500 mA
    Secondary winding 2 = 24 V at 100 mA
    Total secondary VA = ( 5 x 0.5 ) + ( 24 x 0.1) = 4.9 VA
    Primary VA will still equal the total secondary VA.[/LIST]
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