Electric Transformers

Find electric transformers from electrical transformer manufacturers and electric transformer companies. From step down transformers and step up transformers to inductors and inverters, you will find the electric transformer you need. Use the time-saving Request for Quote tool to submit your inquiry to all the electric transformer manufacturers and companies you select.

Johnson Electric Coil is a complete manufacturer of electric transformers & power transformers for many industries. Some transformers include custom, power, isolation, toroidal & current transformers. We are proud of our excellence in customer service, support & quality products. Our motto is "great people making great transformers for great reasons." Let us make a great transformer for you!
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Epco Products offers fast and personal service for all of your power transformer & inductor applications. Serving OEMs since 1949 in the manufacture of high-quality & reliable isolation transformers, auto transformers, inductors, reactors & chokes for commercial and military. If you are looking for the most cost effective electrical transformer design for your application, please contact us today!
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Bruce Electric Equipment is one of the largest dealers and master stocking distributors of quality electric power equipment such as transformers. Our enormous inventory is what makes Bruce a unique company. We treat every order as if it's the most important one on the world, because to the customer and his business, it is. Other services offered include rentals, repairs and localized delivery.
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Since 1956, Powertran has specialized in the design and manufacture of electric transformers such as power transformers, high voltage transformers, low voltage transformers, isolation transformers & current transformers. We have a range of products from shielded general purpose to enclosed industrial control transformers. To learn more about us, please log on to our website or give us a call.
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Tranex, Inc.
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Colorado Springs, CO
800-886-5354
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Founded in 1960, Tranex designs & manufactures both standard & custom transformers, inductors & toroids. We serve industries such as medical, semi-conductor equipment, food preparation, telecommunications, instrumentation & aerospace industries. Our company has built its reputation on service & quality; therefore we manufacture to ISO 9001 standards & are dedicated to continuous improvement.
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power transformers

Pacific Transformer (Pactran) is a leading manufacturer and supplier of custom electric transformers, power transformers, isolation transformers, dry type transformers, toroidal transformers and high voltage transformers that meet the highest standards for a wide range of industries. Pacific Technologies only delivers the best, as we test 100 percent of the equipment with manufacture and ship.
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Lenco specializes in a wide variety of custom transformers from Isolation transformers, Ferroresonant transformers, Autotransformers, Three-phase transformers & Inductors. Our success has not come about by accident, but by providing our customers with high-quality products. When you do business with Lenco, you can do it with confidence that your product was designed & engineered by professionals.
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Founded in 1966, Gettysburg Transformer Corp designs and manufactures custom transformers, inductors and coils in large and small quantities. We serve industries such as industrial control, food preparation, medical, instrumentation, water conditioning, gaming and many other industries. We offer our transformers with rating up to 50 amps. Our company also offers medical & off shore transformers.
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BETA Transformer develops the smallest electric transformers worldwide along with high reliable magnetic component transformers. Standard & custom transformers (signal, surface mount, switch mode, reference, Scott-T, power transformers), are used in military, commercial & space applications. BETA is known worldwide for superior performance, quality and customer service; we offer quality assurance.
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Industry Information

Electric transformers are inductively coupled electro-magnetic devices which transfer electrical energy from one circuit to another. All electronically operated equipment depend on power transformers to convert electrical currents into voltages which fit a specific application, and current transformation is also required in order to store and transport energy through power lines and grids. By transferring electrical energy through two coil stages, transformers can increase, decrease, isolate, translate and pattern electrical currents to safely power electronic equipment of all voltage requirements. Transformers are configured differently to meet all types of electric transformation applications and range in size from thumb-sized transformers in electric lamps or microphones to the enormous stationary transformers in power facilities. Low voltage transformers convert electrical currents into voltages which fit appliances such as dimmer lights, while high voltage transformers convert currents to power microwaves, vacuums and industrial equipment.

In addition to converting currents to a higher or lower voltage, electric transformers can serve to isolate parts of circuits from others. An electric transformer can be as large as the fenced-in transformers for whole facilities, or they may be small enough to be tucked away in household appliances such as light fixtures. Electric transformers can also serve to convert as power adapters in situations where there is a voltage difference between an electronic component or appliance and an electrical power supply. Safety is of the utmost concern in such situations, since using a voltage which is too high or too low to power a device can result in power grid failure, fire or fatal electric shock.

Instrument transformers, including current transformers, accurately measure and monitor power voltage as it is transmitted proportionally through the primary and secondary coils. Step down transformers convert higher voltages to lower voltages by having fewer secondary coil windings, while step up transformers' higher number of secondary coil windings allow them to convert lower voltages to higher voltages. Toroidal transformers are donut-shaped transformers which are highly space efficient and excellent for reducing electromagnetic interference; inductors limit the amount of AC flow to an appliance or transient application while suppressing high frequency noise, similarly to toroids. Isolation transformers decouple two circuits, allowing AC power to move from one device to another without the two circuits connecting; this is achieved by having the primary and secondary coils not directly connected. Inverters are capable of converting direct current voltage (DC) to alternating current voltage (AC), while pulse transformers create the electrical surges which are used in tellecommunication and detail logic applications such as camera flashes, radar equipment and particle acceperation.

Electric transformers are comprised of two sets of coils or windings linked by a magnetic field. The core is iron, ferrite compound or a laminated core wound with bare copper or enameled coils. The coils are primary and secondary and function as conductors. When the primary coil receives AC voltage, this produces a varying magnetic field of voltage surrounding the conductor; the magnetic field activates the secondary conductor coil. This results in the transformers changing the voltage and transferring electrical energy, ideally with the least amount of energy loss. The number of windings on each coil is important as this determines the voltage that is conveyed from the primary to the secondary through the magnetic field. The ratio of windings,  or "turns", in the primary coil to the number of turns in the secondary coil determines the magnitude of the voltage; for example, a step down transformer will have fewer turns in its secondary coil that the primary, while a step up transformer will have more secondary coil windings than primary. Once the voltage conversion is made, the energy is transferred to the load center and the electrical process continues from there. Both the size and expense of electric transformers increases in proportion to the number of primary windings.
 

electric transformers
electric transformers
Electric Transformers and Electric Transformer Machines Images Provided by Johnson Electric Coil Company
electric transformers
Electric Transformers and Electric Transformer Machines Image Provided by Lenco Electronics, Inc.


  • Current transformers have a primary winding linked in with the circuit to transform the current to measurable medium.
  • Distribution transformers are rated between 3 and 500 KVA with 601 volts or more.
  • Dry type transformers do not use liquid to cool or insulate.
  • High Resistance Transformers have high leakage to reactance to limit the output current to a designated value in the event of a fault.
  • High voltage transformers are designed to handle electrical energy in high voltage levels.
  • Inverters convert between AC and DC power.
  • Isolation Transformers are transformers that insulate the primary circuit from the secondary circuit.
  • Low voltage transformers convert into lower voltages.
  • Power transformers are devices that convert voltage to lower levels.
  • Step Up Transformers are transformers that have a high voltage winding connected to the output load and a low voltage winding connected to the power source.
  • Toroidal transformers have copper wire around a cylindrical core so the magnetic flux is contained.
  • Transformers are a static piece of apparatus that transfers electrical energy from one circuit to another circuit by electro-magnetic induction, often with altered values of voltage and current.



Air Cooled - A transformer which uses air to cool by use of fans or normal ventilation.

Auto Transformer - A transformer with one winding per phase.

Banked - Describes multiple single phase transformers connected together to provide power to a three phase load.

Core - The transformer's central part or inductor that enhances the power of the magnetic field.
 
Core Saturation - A condition that results from a transformer or inductor reaching highest magnetic strength.

Delta - In a three phase connection the windings all connect to form a loop.

Duty Cycle - proportion of time for a transformer to provide full rated power to the load. This measurement greatly affects the actual size of the transformer.
 
Electrostatic Shielding - A component that sits between windings -typically the primary and secondary - to supply the most isolation; more of these can be placed between secondary windings as needed; it is normal to connect the shielding to the core. Encapsulated - a dry transformer with an enclosed core and coil assemble.

Exciting Current - The amount of current a transformer draws at nominal voltage input in an unloaded state.
 
Ferroresonance - Resonance results from the saturation of a ferrous core of an inductive component, which increases the inductive reactance relative to the capacitance reactance.
 
Filter - A complex system within the transformer that consists of capacitors, inductors, and a resistor; it provides a relative small opposition to specific frequencies or direct current, as it blocks or attenuates other frequencies.

Flexible Connector - A conductor that can handle thermal expansion and contraction as well as reduce noise.

Impedance - That the forces that resist the flow of current in AC circuits like resistance or inductive or capacitive reactance.
 
Inductance - The capability of a coil for storing energy and resisting changes in the flow of current; it is a function of the core material, amount of turns of the coil and the cross section.
 
Inrush Current - This is when the transformer has a short current surge through it, from residual flux, occurring at the moment energy is applied to the transformer.
 
Isolation Transformer - This transformer has physical separation from the primary and secondary windings in order to allow magnetic coupling between isolated circuits and minimize electrostatic coupling.

KVA - Kilovolt Ampere rating that is a measurement of the output of a transformer without exceeding a certain temperature.

Load - The quantity of electric power supplied or necessitated at any particular spot in the system. Also a requirement of the KVA or VA from the transformer; light bulbs are loads.
 
Magnetic Shielding - This conductive material attenuates stray magnetic fields by its positioning around a transformer's coils.

Polarity - The direction of the current between two leads. If the directions are the same then the leads have the same polarity. In electric transformers the polarity is classes as either additive or subtractive.

Power Factor - Watts divided by volt amps, KW divided by KVA. Power factor: leading and lagging of voltage versus current caused by inductive or capacitive loads, and harmonic power factor: from nonlinear current.
 
Rated Power - The total of the Volts and Amps derived from all the secondary windings.
 
Reactance - This is the opposition to variations of alternating current, capacitive reactance is in terms of capacitors, and inductive reactance is the opposition to change from an inductor or coils.
 
Resonance - A condition of an AC circuit in which capacitive and inductive reactances interact, resulting in a maximum or minimum circuit impedance.

Secondary Winding - On the load or output side, the connected transformer winding.

Sudden Pressure Relay - Pressure switch device which detaches the transformer from the line.

Voltage - The measurement of the amount of force on a unit charge because of the surrounding charges.

Voltage Regulation - The change, in percentages, of the output voltage from no load to full load.
 
Voltage Taps - Supplemental connections to a winding which permit varying voltages from the same winding; typically utilized on the primary winding to permit the transformer to be used in different countries with varying line voltages