Hi /g/, im working to reverse engineer this induction heater i got, and i think i have the right schematic (pic related). Does this make sense? I find it particularly odd that the work coil doesn't seem to directly interact with the ground/negative terminal.
Those Schottky diodes are probably Schottky, they are model FR307. Feel free to assume that the values of all the components are reasonable.
>>53903548
do your homework alone
>>53903548
Are you doing HVAC?
I'm learning HVAC and today we learned how to read schmetics.But to a bare bones minimal effort.
>>53903548
Good luck with that. /g/ is 80% consumer electronics discussion, 10% actual programming, 10% shitposting and 0% circuitry discussion. Maybe try reddit.
>>53903837
It's not homework, it's a project of mine
>>53903890
Nah. The story is im an aspiring smith, among other things. Induction heaters make pretty good forges. But the ones i have keep melting themselves, since they're chinese pieces of shit.
Im planning on putting the components on a new breadboard, one that doesn't melt. But to do that, i need to know how they're connected. So i've been looking at them and drawing, and this is the result. But im not 100% sure it's correct
>>53903916
this guy almost got it right
/g/ doesn't have half a brain cell, especially when it comes to true technology
luckily for you, there is one last bastion of technological intelligence on this website
try >>>/diy/ohm
>>53903890
You wanting to go into residential or industrial?
>>53904332
I'm going universal (both)