That thing could be a useful element, seen that they were constructed
for quite some load (heater/condenser):
> I have a very big stabilizer/transformer at hand, formerly used for and
> airconditioning.  Could that be compared with an isolation transformer?

How does the secondary side behave with a V meter, on this weird power
line you have ? (You still may need a second transfo to get at a usful
Voltage like 220 or 110 +/- 10) Measure with an without load, some of
these "stbilisers" are only stable with (immediate) load on.

> The only disadvantage is that the thing is not without noise because the
> iron kernel plates (do not know the proper technical name) are vibrating
> constantly and tightening the nuts and bolts did not improve anything.

How about putting it outside the house or at least the room ? These
are heavy-duty gear, hold decades. You could hang a lot of lighter
equipment on it, lamps, radios, 'puters etc.

Or put a noise insulating box around it (heavy wood/thick agglomerate;
clad inside with dampening material - there are those mats from the
inner side of motor bonnets/compartements of cars - and anchor it with
some shock absorber, like dense real coutchouc); depending on how
warm it gets with/without load, it may not even need forced cooling, a
chimney effect might do, otherwise any cheap, quiet, full-tension fan
like precisely those 80x80 or 50x50 mm in 'puter power units.

// Heimo Claasen   //   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   //   Brussels 1999-08-
HomePage of ReRead - and much to read ==> http://www.inti.be/hammer

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