<lecture mode>
Yes, it is essentially one long winding with a center tap. In some cases, such as a buck or boost autotransformer with a small voltage difference that one winding will actually change wire size at the center tap. But you can ignore that for a 1:1 ratio.
You have four wires because it is NOT an autotransformer. It is a isolation transformer with two separate windings. But if you wan to use it that way you have to put a red marking on the white that shows DC continuity to the red and a black marking on the white that shows DC continuity to the black.
It is apparently marketed as an autotransformer based on the fact that it is shipped to you with the whites connected together. And the rest of the design may have been optimized for that configuration. But it is actually an isolation transformer.
PS: The DC resistance is close to zero but the impedance at 60Hz is quite high (and mostly inductive). That is what limits the no-load current flow once the transient issue of core magnetization has been dealt with.
PPS: And if it were not for magnetic hysteresis, the inrush current would not be nearly as bad. You should notice that sometimes the thump is louder that others, depending on where the voltage is in its cycle when you close the switch.
</lecture mode>
Yes, it is essentially one long winding with a center tap. In some cases, such as a buck or boost autotransformer with a small voltage difference that one winding will actually change wire size at the center tap. But you can ignore that for a 1:1 ratio.
You have four wires because it is NOT an autotransformer. It is a isolation transformer with two separate windings. But if you wan to use it that way you have to put a red marking on the white that shows DC continuity to the red and a black marking on the white that shows DC continuity to the black.
It is apparently marketed as an autotransformer based on the fact that it is shipped to you with the whites connected together. And the rest of the design may have been optimized for that configuration. But it is actually an isolation transformer.
PS: The DC resistance is close to zero but the impedance at 60Hz is quite high (and mostly inductive). That is what limits the no-load current flow once the transient issue of core magnetization has been dealt with.
PPS: And if it were not for magnetic hysteresis, the inrush current would not be nearly as bad. You should notice that sometimes the thump is louder that others, depending on where the voltage is in its cycle when you close the switch.
</lecture mode>
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