I'm rebuilding an old home brew that served me well for 20 some years plus because it's time for an update and refurbish. When I built this amp in the late 70s, initially upon completion I had alot of problems with the amp (and chassis) heating up and blowing fuses and not being heat-stable. The fix at that time was to add alot of extra heat sinking to the chassis and the amp became stable and worked well for a very long time. I think I even added a fan later at one point but decided to eliminate it now because of the massive dust buildup fans cause in and about the chassis.
I'm rethinking things now (this was an inelegant solution, I think) and it appears there is no real reason that I need such over-the-top heatsinking. The chassis seems of sufficient mass to dissipate the heat buildup from the compliment of components I've chosen. So I've eliminated this extra heatsinking and taken great steps to insure good chassis mounting and grounding of the power transformer, which was the original heat-generating culprit. The amp seems fine now but it does get hotter than before but it's not blowing fuses or anything like that. My question now becomes how hot is too hot for a power transformer? We all know anecdotal measurements (if you touch it and you can't keep your fingers there more than 3 or 5 seconds, then it's too hot) but I'm wondering if there's any hard scientific data on transformers and temperature; what's safe and when does a transformer enter the breakdown area because of excessive heat?
The chassis is similar in size to a Deluxe Reverb amp and the power transformer is a Vibrolux Reverb transformer. I'm driving 2x 6L6s into 8 ohms. The amp is fantastic but I'd like to get on top of this heat situation before I consider the update completed. Any comments and expertise are appreciated.
Thanks in adv,
Bob M.
I'm rethinking things now (this was an inelegant solution, I think) and it appears there is no real reason that I need such over-the-top heatsinking. The chassis seems of sufficient mass to dissipate the heat buildup from the compliment of components I've chosen. So I've eliminated this extra heatsinking and taken great steps to insure good chassis mounting and grounding of the power transformer, which was the original heat-generating culprit. The amp seems fine now but it does get hotter than before but it's not blowing fuses or anything like that. My question now becomes how hot is too hot for a power transformer? We all know anecdotal measurements (if you touch it and you can't keep your fingers there more than 3 or 5 seconds, then it's too hot) but I'm wondering if there's any hard scientific data on transformers and temperature; what's safe and when does a transformer enter the breakdown area because of excessive heat?
The chassis is similar in size to a Deluxe Reverb amp and the power transformer is a Vibrolux Reverb transformer. I'm driving 2x 6L6s into 8 ohms. The amp is fantastic but I'd like to get on top of this heat situation before I consider the update completed. Any comments and expertise are appreciated.
Thanks in adv,
Bob M.
Comment