Tap converter


The tap converter is a variation on the cycloconverter, invented in 1981 by New York City electrical engineer Melvin Sandler and significantly functionally enhanced in 1982 through 1984 by graduate students Mariusz Wrzesniewski, Bruce David Wilner, and Eddie Fung. Whereas the cycloconverter switches among a variety of staggered input phases to piece together an extremely jagged output signal, the tap converter synthesizes a much smoother signal by switching among a variety of transformer output taps.

Tap positions

Both linear spacing and power-of-two-style Vernier spacing can be employed in establishing the tap positions, e.g., a four-tap transformer can provide taps at 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1.0 or 0.0625, 0.125, 0.25, and 0.5.

Scott transformer

By employing a Scott transformer input connection, in order to provide a quadrature phase, an even smoother output waveform can be obtained.

Prototypes

Prototypes of the device were constructed and field-tested under a variety of conditions—nominally as a variable-speed constant-frequency power source for military aircraft—and ornate computer models were constructed for exploring more ornery considerations, such as flux leakage, hysteresis, and practical thyristor characteristics. All of this work was performed at New York's Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art.

Applications

As of 2007, the tap converter remains uncommercialized but is used in several military applications due to the minimal output harmonics.