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open ckt idling high tension pt ac detrimental?
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostYou have built a single ended amp. Push pull amps naturally cancel out hum from the B+, but your single tube cannot do that. So the ripple that would sound OK in a push pull, sounds hummy in a single ended. Note your plates (OT) take B+ right off the first node. Now compare to the 5E1, note the OT takes its B+ AFTER the first node and choke, over at the second node. That design will have lower hum than yours.
"Oh but it sounds different!" Right, yes it does. Now it's "Hubert." AKA Hum-free. Enjoy guitar unmodulated by power supply hum.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostYep, but remember, there are many sources of hum, and this only affects the B+ ripple kind.
Hey you're back to posting a lot, must be feeling better, good to see it Enzo.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Okay, gotta hunt down premaster electrolytic and inductor that can fit existent accommodation, electronically too, as the 5y3 does have limitations concerning how much current it can deliver without over-extending itself.
The sound will get spongy because the inductor stores and releases energy for the droop demand recovery
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Originally posted by hewo View PostIf no energy is drawn out from pt secondary winding (s) the primary winding becomes a mere coil load to the utility company's feed of line power.
Think of the tungsten filament heating inside incandescent bulb fed by utility company ac feed.
So I think the weak link is the primary winding, as it appears just like said tungsten filament, only less resistive being copper filament
The time spent energized is not what kills a light bulb - what kills a light bulb is the high temperature literally boiling metal off the surface of the filament. An incandescent bulb's filament is current-limited by its resistance, and it heats up until the rising resistance from heating balances the current flow heating it.
This is not the same as a PT. The current in a PT's primary is limited to quite a low value by the inductance of the primary coil. It simply cannot heat up like the filament in a bulb. The temperature is so low that there is no wear of the copper wire, and so leaving the primary connected to the AC power line causes no significant wear to the primary wire at all. In fact, it is so little temperature rise that it causes no significant aging of the insulation, which is really what ages transformers.
So the concept of "wearing out" the primary wires is incorrect. Transformers do not age that way.
Fusing the dc ht feed to ot dramatically changes sound, why?, is fuse choking current dynamic demand (s) based on musical signal dynamics?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.
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Originally posted by hewo View PostOkay, gotta hunt down premaster electrolytic and inductor that can fit existent accommodation, electronically too, as the 5y3 does have limitations concerning how much current it can deliver without over-extending itself.
The sound will get spongy because the inductor stores and releases energy for the droop demand recovery
Also keep in mind Champ was conceived as a cheap no frills student amp. That's it's charm. Gussy it up too much & you have an overengineered hi fi SE rig. Beyond reducing hum all I'd recommend is play Champs thru a bigger speaker. Surprise, recorded music sounds great thru that kind of amp, like great grandpa's old livingroom radio. Just can't get disco-loud.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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In addition you must remember that a single ended amp is class A operation and there is very little change in current draw between idle and full volume. Therefore, there is little B+ voltage sag as the amp is used. Even a fairly large resistance in the B+ line feeding the power tube will not cause audible sag like you would experience with a Class AB1 push pull output stage.
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Here's stats: General electric 5y3, sovtek black obscured 6v6, sovtek 12ax7wa non-pewter colored plates
1) utility 120vac 60hz
2) htr leg1 3.346vac, leg2 3.347vac
3) 5y3 htr 5.46vac
4) 300ht engaged, 8ohm load:
4a) node1 ripple 3.5vac versus 279vac, 336vdc
4b) node2 ripple 0.0vac, 292vdc
5) gain&mv peaked, no musical demand:
5a) node1 ripple 3.5vac versus 284vac, 336.8vdc
5b) node2 ripple 0.0vac, 290.5vdc
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Originally posted by hewo View Post
e.g. to save others the bother.
PS: I hope the username and password are (a) not used for anything else and (b) there is nothing else on the ftp site that shouldn't be public. If either of those are true you might want to delete the posts.Experience is something you get, just after you really needed it.
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5Y3 over extending itself? It is just a two tube Champ. The 5Y3 can handle a lot more amp than that.
As was pointed out above, the Champ is a class A amp, the current draw is steady, there is no sag. And if a choke was going to make is spongy,m then so would the filter caps. They also store energy.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Nickb I can't find the remove button for concerned posting.
Do I ask forum moderator?
And yes, data is intracorrespondence of the outside to govt, viceversa, purged periodically.
I need a helping hand to effect transient data acquisitions, you know, pluck attack on a p90.
Have two identical textronic 60mhz dual trace (analog), galaxy s3 camera, haven't fused htac ct to earth yet, gotta create equivalent shorted fuse for comparison
Originally posted by nickb View PostThe pics are just chassis shots. I thought we were going to get some revelations about fuses and power supply transient response.
e.g. to save others the bother.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]36588[/ATTACH]
PS: I hope the username and password are (a) not used for anything else and (b) there is nothing else on the ftp site that shouldn't be public. If either of those are true you might want to delete the posts.
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