So I'm trying to figure out a way to make a speaker hum remotely (my sights are pretty low... Any sound will make me happy). I have 2 30:1 transformers and a bunch of wire. I've tried just coiling the wire up around a cylinder, hooking the transformers up in series, and using a tone generator app on an iPad to run a signal through it from a home theater amp. I can get about .6V p-p at around 14khz, too much lower frequencies trigger the protection circuit (note: I don't care too much if I fry this amp). With no load, I can get about 350 volts out of the series of transformers. I have an a assortment of speakers around me, and none hummed (the transformers were hissing however). I think what I'm missing is coiling the wire the correct way. I've got some capacitors laying around, but I assume there's some way to get some humming just by finding the right frequency and coiling the wire the right way. I'm thinking I need to go for higher current rather than higher voltage with the transformers (basically reverse the way I had them) and do some actual calculation in my windings to find an inductance that matches the impedance of the system better. Any suggestions? I pretty much don't remember any of my AC circuit stuff, I'm trying to brush up.[Edited on August 23, 2013 at 12:22 AM. Reason : ]
8/23/2013 12:21:34 AM
:-(
8/23/2013 6:40:14 PM
I've read the OP several times, and I'm still not sure what it is you're trying to accomplish.
8/25/2013 7:45:06 PM
this^
8/26/2013 11:35:56 AM
I want to create a mutual inductance between L5 and L6, with the only fixed parameters being the signals have to be in the audible frequency range, and that my 2 transformers are fixed to their list values:I mainly need to know the best way to go about determining what L6 needs to be, and should I hook my signal generator up to the higher-wound side of the transformer (increases current on output) or lower-wound side (increases voltage level on output).
8/26/2013 7:18:10 PM
How about a block diagram...with basic inputs,outputs/what you want to archive.
8/27/2013 2:06:26 PM
The previous diagram is as basic as it really gets. Just pretend the things are blocks, and you have a block diagram.Just making this thread is giving me a better idea of what i need to do... have to do some impedance matching between the transformers and source/sinks.
8/27/2013 8:27:46 PM
Okay, you remember back in the days when you put your cell phone near your computer speakers and they made sounds?I want that to happen, but on purpose, with me controlling it.I operating under the assumption that inducing baseband audio signals would work. 1) This could be a bad assumption 2) i might not have the right parts to do it.[Edited on August 28, 2013 at 1:53 PM. Reason : ]
8/28/2013 1:52:29 PM
I don't know, and i've been outa school for a while... But I think the cellphone was was influencing the amp, not the speaker itself.I don't see you generating a field big enough to actually move the speaker
8/29/2013 2:44:27 PM
The speaker will be hooked up to an amplifier.This ultimately, if works, will turn into a prank...
8/29/2013 6:06:21 PM