Thanks for all your suggestions so far. I understand it's not easy to say anything about it based on so little data so I'll give some more info on the transformer block:
The block's dimensions are 123 * 134 * 105 (height) mm and weighs approx. 5.3 kg. The box itself is 0.75 mm metal, except for the top which is plastic (numbered 4022 369 37562, no further markings). The brown resin inside leaves 15 mm of free space under the plastic plate. On top there are 7 terminals: 1 and 2 on one side and 3-7 on the other.
From the resin 12 isolated wires emerge, which I de-soldered from the top plate (which I removed) and from each other. After some simple measurements I found out that what's inside is most likely a transformer with two secondary coils, with two wires on the primary coil (connected to terminals 1 and 2) and five on each of the secondary coils (the two coils connected in parallel to terminals 3-7).
The wires on terminals 1 and 2, as well as both the wires on each of the terminals 3 and 7, are solid copper wires, diameter 1 mm. The other six wires (terminals 4,5,6) have a 0.75 mm diameter and appear to be more iron-like. I suppose the 1 mm wires carried the larger currents while the other terminals were used only for special purposes. When I apply 230 VAC to the primary coil, each secondary coil's total voltage difference becomes 62 V, divided into 4-27-27-4 by the smaller wires.
I don't currently have any accurate measuring equipment, as my (cheap) digital multimeter broke some days ago. I made the voltage measurements using an (even cheaper) analog multimeter, but I plan to make more accurate measurements on the electrical/thermal characteristics as soon as I've bought a new (and hopefully better) multimeter.
Although I'm not sure, the transformer block has most likely been part of a power supply unit for an old electron microscope. The PSU input was probably 230 VAC/50 Hz. I have some other components which are very likely from the same PSU:
- Two 15 mF capacitors, rated 63 VDC, I eff (100 Hz)= 28 A. (height: 110 mm, diameter 65 mm).
- Four diodes: two BYX42-300R and two BYX42-300 . (I couldn't find exact ratings, but I believe they are 300 V / 12 A).
I suppose these things have been used as a rectifier+filter, but I have no idea how far beyond the maximum ratings the actual currents were.
As to the suggestion to compare the weight to other transformers there are two problems (although I like the suggestion):
- I don't know the density of the resin, which makes it hard to know the weight of the transformer itself. (the density of the metal can be estimated accurately enough I think)
- The transformer is probably quite old, and I can imagine the performance/weight ratio of available transformers has improved over the years (but maybe not, transformers are still low-tech after all).