In one of his books, Tonnes of Tone, Kevin O'Connor uses the 5V winding to make an unregulated 6VDC power supply for preamp tubes. Real simple, 4 diodes and a cap, 2200uF if IRC.
WARNING! Musical Instrument amplifiers contain lethal voltages and can retain them even when unplugged. Refer service to qualified personnel. REMEMBER: Everybody knows that smokin' ain't allowed in school !
you could put the led's behind the tubes so that they make the amp look as if the tubes are actually doing something. (I swear I remember seeing something like this on a Crate Blue Doodoo or a similar amp?)
I like both of your ideas better than mine:
remove the bell of the xformer, cut the leads way up in that and then seal them individually with heashrink. Looks clean, and keeps them out of harms way.
you could put the led's behind the tubes so that they make the amp look as if the tubes are actually doing something. (I swear I remember seeing something like this on a Crate Blue Doodoo or a similar amp?)
Yes Crate does this, as does Engl, and some others...as with most things, PV did it first with their Ultra. I get nice (cheap, $1.50) ceramic sockets which have a through hole that fits a 3mm LED perfectly, which I'll use; not as visible as behind the tube but cleaner
Are there really any 5v LED's? I thought the 5v rating was the max forward voltage for the LED. I like the LED idea as well as using an LED for the power indicator. I saw one thread on another forum about a guy that used a red/green LED to indicate then the mains were on and when the standby was on. Sounds like an interesting application for the 5V winding.
Are there really any 5v LED's? I thought the 5v rating was the max forward voltage for the LED. I like the LED idea as well as using an LED for the power indicator. I saw one thread on another forum about a guy that used a red/green LED to indicate then the mains were on and when the standby was on. Sounds like an interesting application for the 5V winding.
There are LEDs with built in series resistors to run on 5v, but people usually add there own series resistors, see herehttp://www.csgnetwork.com/ledsingresistancecalc.html LED series parallel array wizard
LEDs do have a variety of forward voltages:
1.8->4.5v, see: Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs)
on AC you only get 1/2 cycle, but its usually AOK
Would putting a bridge rectifier in there work? Not sure what the voltage would be out of the bridge. Maybe I will use the Duncan PS designer to see what it will look like.
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