Home & Garden1 min ago
Which transformer
I bought my boyfriend a cement mixer for Christmas. It needs a transformer as it is a 110V mixer.
I know nothing about this. I have seen one advertised from 230V to 110V. Does this mean he can plug it into the mains? I just need to enable him to connect it to standard supply. Any advice welcome, and how much should a decent transformer cost? Anything else a bonus as I really can't understand them. Why is it a 110V in the first place? etc
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by jedimistress. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A 230/110 V transformer will do fine. It should look like this . It should cost �60 - �70. The reason for 110V is safety, 230/240V kills, 110V does not.
Hmmm. Tinypic does not seem to be working for me tonight !! I'll now try this .
In fact we had somebody locally who died from using a electric welder in a wet environment and the voltage from those is around 45v open circuit.
I think you already got it slightly wrong because you put Kv and not Kw in your last question, yeah I know somebody will say these are small points but when you are making technical questions you have to make an effort to get things right or you can end up buying the wrong stuff or paying a lot more than you need to.
So if a device takes a 1.5Kw load then you need a 1.5Kw or more transformer, I suggest that for this application where overloading at starting might happen often then at least 3.0Kw would be best (a motor can take up to six times its running current when starting).
The transformer rating is the total output regardless of how many plugs there are. Each plug has its own current rating and a 1.5Kw load at 110v is 13.7Amps so you must choose a transformer with at least 16Amp plugs fitted, 32Amps plugs would be even better but is not essential.
Thanks Mustafatinkl.
Your answers are lovely and clear. I know I might write out the wrong things a little when asking but I figured someone who knows what they are talking about, or what I am talking about, would understand my mistakes.
At least I know that k for kilo is always a little k. V, W and A should have capitals. I remember that much from physics.
I will opt for the 3.3kVA output double socket site transformer. This sound ok? Thanks again. Lynsey