Originally Posted by
SecondGen
See, I've heard this explination before but I don't understand its effects on the test. Since we are talking DC, I imagine that any transformation in the windings would be very, very brief until the winding under test is polarized. Once voltage is sustained, any induction to the other windings would dissipate almost immediately.
All of this happens during initial charging current, which is usually only a few seconds, so whats the point? I imagine the difference in potential cant be more than a couple volts, so how much induction is actually taking place?
The only thing that instantly comes to mind is preventing voltage spikes that could possibly damage the low side insulation, depending on the rated voltage. Is there something else Im not seeing here?