I'm building a microphone preamplifier. I was having problems with hum (intermittent ground hum when touching the case) and decided to try adding an audio isolation transformer (600 ohm : 600 ohm) before its output. The circuit is powered by AA batteries.
I wired this up and then tried it out plugged into a guitar amplifier, an amplifier that I'd been using before (with success), to test the circuit before I added the transformer.
The amplifier blew its fuse after a couple of seconds of loud low buzz/hum. This was a surprise, because as I understand it a 1-to-1 transformer doesn't change the voltage or current, and for a fuse to blow the current would have to go over the fuse's limit.
What about the signal did the amplifier not like? What could have gone wrong?
To be clear, The preamp was working without the transformer (other than the occasional ground hum. which I've now worked around with some electric tape). The only thing that changed was putting in the transformer right before the output jack. the transformer can't be wired up backwards because it's 1:1. right? so that would seem to eliminate some error in connecting the transformer.