Voltmeters off X ray machines are NOT rated to the voltage indicated on
the scale. They are a low voltage meter that is fed from a voltage divider
circuit.
You can apply low voltage DC and determine what the actual rating of the
meter is and also the resistance and then make a voltage divider to hazard
to the meter itself.
>
>
At 08:52 AM 5/23/2010 -0500, you wrote:
I wanted to ask if whether or not the primary, or secondary, voltages can
be measured with a meter. Here's what I did, and I don't know if my meter
is that far off, or if there is something else affecting the readings that
I'm not aware of. I have an old KV meter from an x-ray machine with a
range of 40kv to 140kv dc. I attached a couple hv diodes to the meter and
attached it to the secondary electrodes on a bi-pole coil. The needle was
pegged almost immediately when I started to apply power. Then I switched
it over to the output on the transformer (9kv, 30ma nst). With the variac
.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla