So I just finished a harvard build with adjustable bias. I fired it up on the bench to make sure it worked and it worked fine: High voltage PT taps read 564VAC, B+ was at 330V, at -27V according to the schematic the voltage across my 1 ohm bias resistor read about .050V, which means 50mA. . . I adjusted the bias to get it down to like 30mA. The amp was extremely quiet too.
Being that I'm a bit of a noob and this is my second build, I have an awful tendency to melt the plastic off my sprague filter caps, so i bought a couple more and replaced the current ones I melted. I didn't have a chance to test it again until just tonight. It sounded overdriven with the volume at about "2", which it shouldn't do that until about full volume, so I started taking some measurements, and the voltage across the 1ohm was .1-- or even .2-- at one point. . . So i started checking the voltages on the new capacitors; the first filter cap had a about 0.8 volts across it, the B+ was reading a 278V and the High taps were 547VAC. I replace the first filter with the melted one that I knew worked. Upon turning it on again, everything was normal for about 5 seconds, quiet and all, then the hum builds up, the speaker pops once, and I'm getting these unusually low B+ and insanely high tube current readings. The only difference is that the filter cap I replaced now retains the 278V across it.
Might it be the power transformer? no other taps have a change in output voltage however. . .
EDIT: taking off the High Taps, it measures 557VAC. I don't know that it's the kinda thing where one can say close enough because it measured 564V with and without the rectifier tube before
Being that I'm a bit of a noob and this is my second build, I have an awful tendency to melt the plastic off my sprague filter caps, so i bought a couple more and replaced the current ones I melted. I didn't have a chance to test it again until just tonight. It sounded overdriven with the volume at about "2", which it shouldn't do that until about full volume, so I started taking some measurements, and the voltage across the 1ohm was .1-- or even .2-- at one point. . . So i started checking the voltages on the new capacitors; the first filter cap had a about 0.8 volts across it, the B+ was reading a 278V and the High taps were 547VAC. I replace the first filter with the melted one that I knew worked. Upon turning it on again, everything was normal for about 5 seconds, quiet and all, then the hum builds up, the speaker pops once, and I'm getting these unusually low B+ and insanely high tube current readings. The only difference is that the filter cap I replaced now retains the 278V across it.
Might it be the power transformer? no other taps have a change in output voltage however. . .
EDIT: taking off the High Taps, it measures 557VAC. I don't know that it's the kinda thing where one can say close enough because it measured 564V with and without the rectifier tube before
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