Originally posted by eschertron
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Davis 201A PA Conversion
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Isn't a transformer usually measured with the circuit operating under load? It seems the off-load voltage means nothing because transformers have different regulation percentages. Some 250-0-250 traffos might read 350v off load and some might be 30-40 volts either way of that number. Don't mean to be argumentative, just practical. And the specs given for a traffo will be the loaded voltage not the off load voltage. Obvoiously this one has no given specs, just illustrating the importance of voltages under load.Turn it up so that everything is louder than everything else.
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My interest in measuring loaded vs. unloaded is in trying to determine why what I'm seeing in voltages doesn't match what the schematic shows. It may well turn out that the transformer has been changed, but who knows, I may pull all the tubes except the rectifier and suddenly see that 330V and 285V on the third and fourth filter caps.
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Originally posted by Pdavis68 View PostMy interest in measuring loaded vs. unloaded is in trying to determine why what I'm seeing in voltages doesn't match what the schematic shows. It may well turn out that the transformer has been changed, but who knows, I may pull all the tubes except the rectifier and suddenly see that 330V and 285V on the third and fourth filter caps.If it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey
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Originally posted by olddawg View PostIf you want a dedicated headphone amp check out a little MS-2 Marshall. They are around $30, less on sale. You will be surprised. It has a speaker in it too. You can also go DI to a PA with it.
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Originally posted by eschertron View PostIf you get an accurate measure of the filter resistors, you can calculate the current passing through each node, and figure what each node is supplying to the tube complement. Regardless of the ratings on the transformers, this can give you a picture of the health of the components, and whether or not they are operating within their envelope.
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Just an update. I'm updating the schematic with the actual values from the amp (and putting them next to the components where they should have been in the first place). I'm about 75% done with it and will hopefully finish it tonight and get it posted here. A lot of values have changed.
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So I finished updating the values on the schematic and I've uploaded it here. I added the note in the upper right for the benefit of people who might search for a schematic for a Davis 201-A and wonder why their component values are so different.
Mic 1 and Mic 3 swapped places.
My current plans are:
1> Add screen grid resistors (200 ohm, I think)
2> Change the preamp grid stoppers to 1M
3> Add another power tap below the 260V (maybe down to 250V with 10u cap) for the first stage preamps, so they're not sharing the power with the second and third stages.
4> Cathode bias the first stage preamps (well, I may LED bias one of them) and change the plate resistors to 100K. I'll bias each one different.
I'm going to remove 2 jacks and add 3 on/off switches, one for each channel. So in the on position, the channel is connected to the input jack. So you can basically parallel any of the 3 preamp channels (kind of like jumpering the second channel in a Marshall). But in this case you don't need the jumper cable and you can do any combination of the 3 channels.
I'll do things in stages. Make a change, test it out and see how it sounds, make the next change, try it out. Etc...
After all that is done, I'll start looking into changing the tone stack to a Baxandall.
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Looking at (R29) NFB resistor, I see it's 100k with 220R on the tail of the gain stage (R23). Might as well not have NFB with that ratio. What's the factory value for those resistors?If it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey
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Originally posted by eschertron View PostLooking at (R29) NFB resistor, I see it's 100k with 220R on the tail of the gain stage (R23). Might as well not have NFB with that ratio. What's the factory value for those resistors?
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Originally posted by Pdavis68 View PostMaybe it was 2.2K and I misread it or maybe I was looking at the wrong pin. I'll check that tonight.
That and the 16R tap will get about 14x more NFB.
I modded a SF champ and added a pot on the NFB. IIRC the original was 2.2k NFB with a 47R tail. I put a 25k audio pot in series with a 220R resistor. dialed to one extreme, I get about 12dB NFB to make the amp quieter and a lot more polite, dialed the other way it's essentially no NFB. I use it primarily as volume, to match the acoustic environment. A rage monster it's not, but it goes from 'subtle and clean' to not-so-clean very well.If it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey
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Originally posted by Dave HI think 220R is the correct value for R23 when R22 is 470k as this will bias the directly coupled cathodyne PI correctly. If R23 is 1k5 or 2k2 the plate voltage will be too high to correctly bias the cathodyne. If you want to adjust (increase) the feedback keep R23 at 220R and reduce the value of R29.
Also, I'd like to LED bias one of the channels, but I've read that LEDs aren't terribly linear below 5ma and a 12AX7 isn't going to run that much current. Is there a way I could steal some current from somewhere just to get the LED above 5ma?
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Yep. I agree. Goes to show how little I notice. Even with these values the follower is biased quite warm (about -0.7vdc by my charts). Any changes to the NFB should be to the NFB resistor R29 itself.If it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey
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You were too quick for me. That post of mine was rubbish (the part about using 220R for R23) so I've deleted it. I was thinking of the voltage needed to bias the cathodyne and forgetting about the saturation voltage of the DC coupled stage driving it.Last edited by Dave H; 07-23-2015, 09:04 PM.
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