Yes even with the mods odds are good the secondary is not well isolated from 
the frame and even with the extra secondary windings the primary loading is 
high per turn and load regulation is poor. Over all microwave transformers are 
not very good, if you goggle them plenty of info and speculation about them. If 
you have a matched pair you can turn then into a center grounded configuration. 
There are ways to limit current and voltage like the incandescent bulbs in the 
primary, or the autotransformer already mentioned, but mistakes could be 
costly. HV resistors or strings of resistors could also be used in the 
secondary to limit current. 

/ rambling on
Not sure working on very old cesium standards is very safe much less using 
factory made PS at KVs to revive old tubes but some people jump out of 
perfectly good air planes in the name of fun. HV power supplies are scary and 
yes I have ended up on the other side of the room with a odd metallic taste in 
my mouth, not sure why I lived so long ? $200 to ebay sounds better than the 
cost to replace a time-nut, at least this one:-). If you do live to see your 
homemade power supply working maybe your luck will hold with the tube repair, 
did for me but I only got a few months of lock light and I'm back to square one.
/ rambling off

Stanley



----- Original Message ----
From: Bob Camp <[email protected]>
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, January 17, 2010 7:33:16 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] 4 KV Power Supply Recommendations

Hi

You also could leave the windings as is and feed the secondary voltage into a 
voltage multiplier. Still not very safe to wire up. 

If you did wire it up, the available current would be pretty massive. I 
certainly would not attach it to an ion pump I cared about.

Bob


On Jan 17, 2010, at 6:53 PM, Stanley Reynolds wrote:

> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Chris Stake <[email protected]>
> To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <[email protected]>
> Sent: Sun, January 17, 2010 5:05:01 PM
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] 4 KV Power Supply Recommendations
> 
> What is the operating voltage of the magnetron in a domestic microwave oven?
> Although VERY HAZARDOUS, it might be possible to adapt the PSU from an old
> one?
> Chris Stake
> 
> Yes, if you remove the transformer shunts and the filament windings and add 
> more primary windings in the space you would get about 2700v with a full wave 
> bridge. You also need to lift one side of the secondary that is grounded to 
> the frame. Yes very dangerous and yes I'm luck to be able to tell.
> 
> Stanley
> 
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected]
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> and follow the instructions there.
> 


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