I just finished building a Marshall 2203 clone with a few tweaks -- added a 12AX7 FX loop, bootstrapped master volume and elevated heaters a la TUT3, individual per-tube bias controls, and 150k bias feeds so I could use 6550s.
I'm using Weber transformers and a Weber chassis, but this is my own build and not one of their kits. PT is the Weber WPT100 (spec sheet here), OT is their WOT100HHR. I like Weber transformers, used them in a couple of 50-watt builds and I think they're generally nice and inexpensive and I've never had a problem with them before.
Anyway, fired it up and all is well, except that my unloaded B+ (no tubes in the amp) was 445V. I thought that was low so I switched from the 640VAC (center tapped) taps to the higher 700VAC taps. Unloaded B+ went to 500V, cool. PT measured 716VAC totally unloaded/disconnected across the winding (656VAC at the lower voltage taps).
Put tubes in the amp, fired it up, biased them to 35mA per tube, just to check it and see if it works. B+ sinks to 425V at idle! This is with the higher-voltage taps on the PT. Put a sine wave through it and get barely 60W into a resistive load, at which point b+ has sunk to 358V. Output wave is ugly and has a crossover notch, with one side clipping before the other.
I disabled the bootstrapped MV, returned it to a "normal" configuration. No change. Tried other tubes, no change. All supply voltages are sinking like a rock when the power amp is asked to deliver anything. I've used the VARIAC and monitored the current from the wall, and it doesn't go much above 1A when the amp is cranked up (oughta be a lot more than this, right?). So I don't think there's something in the amp dragging the supply down, and the load on the PT is not excessive. PT is not at all warm. I've been over the wiring a dozen times and (I know you've heard this one before) I don't think I made any mistakes. I've built a lot of amps, never had an issue like this.
Preamp is totally spot-on when I look at the FX send signal. So it's a power amp/supply issue. Happens when I inject into the FX return, which goes through a triode recovery stage (clean, scopes good). MV wiper signal is clean, phase inverter input grid is clean.
Phase inverter and power amp are clean until I get up to about 40W, then it goes south very rapidly. + going half of wave clips like I expect, short of 33VACrms, - going half rounds off in a weird way and clips sooner. It looks the same on both the phase inverter plates, like the phase inverter is breaking up before the power tubes do. The asymmetry is reversed on the two plates, so it's like it's happening at the grid...? But I scoped the grid + input and it's clean. Phase inverter plates are sitting at 169V (inverting) and 180V (non-inverting) at idle. Phase inverter supply node drops from 336V idle to 275V at full power.
No oscillation anywhere to be found, build seems totally stable. NFB looks right on the scope, presence control works normally.
Anyway, I'm a bit at a loss. It's like there's some invisible 300-ohm resistor in series with the B+ winding! Is the horrific voltage sag to blame for all of the ugly clipping and crossover notch? Should I just call Weber and send this PT back?
I'm using Weber transformers and a Weber chassis, but this is my own build and not one of their kits. PT is the Weber WPT100 (spec sheet here), OT is their WOT100HHR. I like Weber transformers, used them in a couple of 50-watt builds and I think they're generally nice and inexpensive and I've never had a problem with them before.
Anyway, fired it up and all is well, except that my unloaded B+ (no tubes in the amp) was 445V. I thought that was low so I switched from the 640VAC (center tapped) taps to the higher 700VAC taps. Unloaded B+ went to 500V, cool. PT measured 716VAC totally unloaded/disconnected across the winding (656VAC at the lower voltage taps).
Put tubes in the amp, fired it up, biased them to 35mA per tube, just to check it and see if it works. B+ sinks to 425V at idle! This is with the higher-voltage taps on the PT. Put a sine wave through it and get barely 60W into a resistive load, at which point b+ has sunk to 358V. Output wave is ugly and has a crossover notch, with one side clipping before the other.
I disabled the bootstrapped MV, returned it to a "normal" configuration. No change. Tried other tubes, no change. All supply voltages are sinking like a rock when the power amp is asked to deliver anything. I've used the VARIAC and monitored the current from the wall, and it doesn't go much above 1A when the amp is cranked up (oughta be a lot more than this, right?). So I don't think there's something in the amp dragging the supply down, and the load on the PT is not excessive. PT is not at all warm. I've been over the wiring a dozen times and (I know you've heard this one before) I don't think I made any mistakes. I've built a lot of amps, never had an issue like this.
Preamp is totally spot-on when I look at the FX send signal. So it's a power amp/supply issue. Happens when I inject into the FX return, which goes through a triode recovery stage (clean, scopes good). MV wiper signal is clean, phase inverter input grid is clean.
Phase inverter and power amp are clean until I get up to about 40W, then it goes south very rapidly. + going half of wave clips like I expect, short of 33VACrms, - going half rounds off in a weird way and clips sooner. It looks the same on both the phase inverter plates, like the phase inverter is breaking up before the power tubes do. The asymmetry is reversed on the two plates, so it's like it's happening at the grid...? But I scoped the grid + input and it's clean. Phase inverter plates are sitting at 169V (inverting) and 180V (non-inverting) at idle. Phase inverter supply node drops from 336V idle to 275V at full power.
No oscillation anywhere to be found, build seems totally stable. NFB looks right on the scope, presence control works normally.
Anyway, I'm a bit at a loss. It's like there's some invisible 300-ohm resistor in series with the B+ winding! Is the horrific voltage sag to blame for all of the ugly clipping and crossover notch? Should I just call Weber and send this PT back?
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