morke
Mechanical
- Mar 5, 2007
- 4
An arcade game from the 1940s uses a small 120 VAC coil to pull in a latch that releases a power switch. The coil present in the game was fried and seems impossibly small --a medium gage wire (I forget the # turns, but maybe .75" diamater). I rewound the coil with the same gage wire and approximate overall size, but it only has a few ohms resistance. In operation, the coil is only on ong enough to pull in the plate and release all power, but the switch contacts arc badly.
On top of this, a 250VAC 0.1MFD cap was wired IN PARALLEL with the coil. I've seen this setup before but the cap is always across the coil switch contacts to minimize arcing, not across the coil itself.
When I apply power to the coil the switch arcs terribly as I've mentioned. I don't know if the cap is any good as it's ancient as well.
So...
Could this be correct that such a low-ohm coil would be used with a high voltage, and was the original coil something other than the one I found in the machine?
What would be the purpose of a cap across the coil (and was the original configuration having the cap across the contacts)?
Keith
, but only a few ohms resistance.
On top of this, a 250VAC 0.1MFD cap was wired IN PARALLEL with the coil. I've seen this setup before but the cap is always across the coil switch contacts to minimize arcing, not across the coil itself.
When I apply power to the coil the switch arcs terribly as I've mentioned. I don't know if the cap is any good as it's ancient as well.
So...
Could this be correct that such a low-ohm coil would be used with a high voltage, and was the original coil something other than the one I found in the machine?
What would be the purpose of a cap across the coil (and was the original configuration having the cap across the contacts)?
Keith
, but only a few ohms resistance.