Ahhhh, adding in the little red wheels. My gut feel is the power supplies were not designed to carry that much current, ether the wires coming out of the power supplies or the land prints on the power supply circuit boards. Somewhere along the lime there is a going to be a sufficient voltage drop when you pull that much current going to the inductor PCB.
But what do I know... It may work. Go ahead and try it, and let us know it it works. This is every bodies build.
Good luck
Gina
Thanks everyone for your input regarding the pc power supply limitations.
I have dropped that idea and will use the two that I hooked up in series for some other project down the road.
Today my B3S timer arrived so it's starting to itch again LOL
Still waiting for the induction board, volt/amp meter and relay though
I'm working on a new low cost power supply solution from 2 hacked microwave oven transformers (MOT).
(have more time than money I guess haha.) This should give me more amps and then I'm not limited by overprotection circuits in a PC PSU.
Have removed the secondary windings on one transformer and rewound it with 12ga wire, still need to do the other one.
When I power up the transformer primaries in series then they each run on about 60v input and 12.5v output.
So when I connect the secondaries in series I will have about 24v.
It's AC so I still need to find a rectifier to convert to DC. (ideas for low cost rectifier
solutions are welcome)
Unfortunately I don't have an amp meter so have no idea yet what the current output is.
The annealer will be heavy as h3ll once done....the MOT's alone weigh 9.5 lb each.
I decided on using two mot's with 60v input because running one on 120v will most likely overheat.
That's the update for now, Merry Christmas everyone!