I'm about to rewire a heater circuit. There was AC going to the power tubes and DC to the preamp tubes in the old wiring. I'm use to wire the whole heater section with AC... Is this a way to prevent? Do I need to bother about rectifying the heater current?
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Heater wiring - DC or AC
Collapse
X
-
DC theoretically reduces hum in the preamp. I guess since a push-pull power amp is hum-cancelling already, it might be a good idea in a high-gain pre-amp. It takes more components, though, and of course, those components need maintenance and can fail. I just repaired a jcm600 that had such a circuit. After retubing and changing the main filters, it came back with a blown heater fuse. It may have been a fluke, cause it behaved with a new fuse, but I should probably change the filters in that section next time I see it.
Comment
-
Originally posted by melvin View Post... since a push-pull power amp is hum-cancelling already, it might be a good idea in a high-gain pre-amp.
You have to kill hum at the source of injection. Once it's mixed in with the signal, it's nearly impossible to dig it back out. There are some tricks, but they are just that - tricks.
After retubing and changing the main filters, it came back with a blown heater fuse. It may have been a fluke, cause it behaved with a new fuse, but I should probably change the filters in that section next time I see it.
This is not to say that the filter caps were not also partly at fault. Just something for you to tuck into the bag of facts.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
Comment
Comment