whats the best way to handle the higher plate voltage if i put a gz34 in? do i lower the plate voltage or just change the bias resistors? wich bias resistor should be changed the 6.8k or the 56k? or both?
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
GZ34 in 5f4 build
Collapse
X
-
I thought that zenering the CT of the High Voltage winding with reverse biased diodes was best way. Aiken has an article on this.
http://www.aikenamps.com/BackBiasing.html
I believe that the other thing you have to watch-out for is how much current a GZ34 draws compared with less-powerful rectifiers, and whether your PT is sufficiently rated to cope. I had to worry about this once when a tube salesman tried to sell me a GZ34 when I needed a 5Y3GT. The former draws higher current than the latter.Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)
"I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo
-
Originally posted by scole View Postwhats the best way to handle the higher plate voltage if i put a gz34 in? do i lower the plate voltage or just change the bias resistors? which bias resistor should be changed the 6.8k or the 56k? or both?
I run a GZ34 in one of my 5F4 amps and it makes about 35 watts.
All my 5F4 amps have an adjustable bias supply and can use any octal based tube rectifier I want.
Comment
-
Originally posted by scole View Postso the 56k comes out and the trim pot and the 27k go in its place? similar to this ceriatone 5f4,
http://www.ceriatone.com/images/layo...one_311207.jpg
It will work fine but I wouldn't be surprised to hear it has a little tiny but annoying hum that is difficult to rid.
Do you know anyone who has built it with that exact layout?
Comment
-
weber says to replace the 68k with the 4.7k and the 56k with the pot? so what should it be?
https://taweber.powweb.com/store/5f4_schem.jpg
Comment
-
Originally posted by scole View Postweber says to replace the 68k with the 4.7k and the 56k with the pot? so what should it be?
https://taweber.powweb.com/store/5f4_schem.jpg
The Weber method is OK, but not the way I drew and do them... and will not hum much but it shows the lack of experience with real amps, real hands on circuits and customers with "twiddle syndrome". If you turn the 50K pot all they way down (max idle current) the power tubes can blow up because all the bias voltage will be shunted to ground.
You should use a pot with a resistor under it to ground so that you can never turn the bias voltage so low that the tubes loose their bias voltage.
Comment
-
-
I think something like a ten-turn pot would be more precise and keep its
setting better. I used single-turn Bourns 3852 cermet pots :which seem to work ok. There's hardly any current involved.
Paul P
Comment
Comment