Hi, nube here. I just finished a 5E1 with Mercury Transformers/Choke and a cab with a P12R Jensen. It's my first amp and I am very happy with the result. I have noticed that it doesn't matter whether I wire the filament circuit with single wire or a double wire (artificial center tap) - it still hums. It's the normal hum and I realize I should just leave it alone. But, my question is if anyone has tried a mod suggested by Gerald Weber that adds a 40v positive bias voltage to the filament circuit with a dropping resistor and a load resistor? He claims this will "elimnate" the hum. Sounds promising.
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"The time I burned my guitar it was like a sacrifice. You sacrifice the things you love. I love my guitar."
- Jimi Hendrix
http://www.detempleguitars.comTags: None
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Originally posted by Sir Cuitous View PostBut, my question is if anyone has tried a mod suggested by Gerald Weber that adds a 40v positive bias voltage to the filament circuit with a dropping resistor and a load resistor? He claims this will "elimnate" the hum. Sounds promising.
HA ha ha...
That trick is as old vacuum tubes themselves and found on lots of old hi-fi amps from before most us were even born.
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But I thought Randall Smith created every innovation in amplification.
Sir Cuitous, If your output tube is cathode biased you can tie the heater center tap to the cathode to raise the heater DC bias.
If you use the voltage divider instead don't forget to add a filter cap from the resistor junction to ground.
DG
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Yes, I wrote that he suggested it. Weber specifically doesn't take claim for it. But I couldn't find much about that circuit anywhere on the Internet. I'm probably not searching right. Thanks for confirming."The time I burned my guitar it was like a sacrifice. You sacrifice the things you love. I love my guitar."
- Jimi Hendrix
http://www.detempleguitars.com
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Hi DG,
I've installed the "old tube hi fi" mod "suggested" by Gerald (should keep everyone happy), exactly as he describes (no filter cap from voltage divider juction, DC voltage derived from 1st filter cap node) and not experienced any buzz, or any other unfortunate symptoms. In fact, the amp in question is so quiet that the pilot light is the only clue that it's turned on (with no instrument connected).
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MWJB, The first time I installed the voltage divider I got the buzz. Since the cap fixed it I have just used a cap on every build since then. Maybe it was just masking some other problem in that build and was not needed on those later builds. Or maybe it has something to do with placement. You put yours on the first node while I put mine on a preamp node.
It sounds like some experimentation is in order.
DG
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On a SE amp wire heaters as a twisted pair, no CT, no 100ohms, no ground reference at all. If you do miss a ground reference you will fry your PT!
From 1st filter cap run a 2W 220K to one side of the heaters. From the same side of the heaters run a 0.5W 27K to ground. You should now have 35-40vdc biasing the heaters. Tweak 27K to make sure that you don't have less than 35v or more than 40v (SF voltage champs might need nearer 22K?).
Shouldn't be necessary on push pull amps.
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