Saber 115V chargers used with 240V
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Saber 115V chargers used with 240V
Can a saber 115V charger be used with 240V if the fuse is changed or is the charger internally built for 115V or is there anyway to swtich it to 240V? Thanks
Motoman at your service!
MOTOMAN....
I received a NTN4786A 220VAC charger and it had provisions by reconfiguring (rotating) the fuse holder to set it up for 115VAC operation. There are about three or four wires there that go to the primary of the transformer and also the fuse holder. The fuse holder does double duty as a Primary Voltage selection switch. Mine is working fine here.
I know you did not ask about 220 to 110 conversion but this also leads me to believe on the NTN4734A that it can be reconfigured in the reverse as well as it has the same voltage selector fuse holder. The fuse would need to be changed to a higher voltage type which in mine is a 400mA @ 250VAC.
Maybe someone else has the specific MOTO documentation on doing this?
Eddie N4UMJ
I received a NTN4786A 220VAC charger and it had provisions by reconfiguring (rotating) the fuse holder to set it up for 115VAC operation. There are about three or four wires there that go to the primary of the transformer and also the fuse holder. The fuse holder does double duty as a Primary Voltage selection switch. Mine is working fine here.
I know you did not ask about 220 to 110 conversion but this also leads me to believe on the NTN4734A that it can be reconfigured in the reverse as well as it has the same voltage selector fuse holder. The fuse would need to be changed to a higher voltage type which in mine is a 400mA @ 250VAC.
Maybe someone else has the specific MOTO documentation on doing this?
Eddie N4UMJ
Forgot to mention in case you did not know the NTN4786A and the NTN4734A are both Saber Desktop Rapid Chargers and only differ in what I can tell by the fuse position and label.
Here again I don't have a schematic or other documentation supporting it's use on both 220 and 115 but it seems Motorola allowed it to be configured to do both.
In addition my 220 VAC NTN4786A charger label calls for a "5 X 20 .4A 250V SLOW BLOW FUSE". Again the glass fuse has a stamping of "400mA/250V "(also has a circle with a capital "T" inside of it) on its endcap.
Looking at several other NTN4734A's I have here I see the NTN4734A and NTN4786A both use the same size/rating fuse.
Hope this gets you going in the right direction and best of luck!
Eddie N4UMJ
Here again I don't have a schematic or other documentation supporting it's use on both 220 and 115 but it seems Motorola allowed it to be configured to do both.
In addition my 220 VAC NTN4786A charger label calls for a "5 X 20 .4A 250V SLOW BLOW FUSE". Again the glass fuse has a stamping of "400mA/250V "(also has a circle with a capital "T" inside of it) on its endcap.
Looking at several other NTN4734A's I have here I see the NTN4734A and NTN4786A both use the same size/rating fuse.
Hope this gets you going in the right direction and best of luck!
Eddie N4UMJ