I went over this thing about 6 months ago, unsoldered the PT from everything, soldered it back, and it worked, for no apparent reason. The chassis is pretty dirty, as far as grime on the metal, and while I cleaned it up electrically, it has a fine layer of yuck on all the metal. Since unsoldering for testing then re-soldering magically fixed it and I couldn't get it to screw up anymore after that, I assumed that the soldering process burned off some semi-conductive crap and solved the issue.
Fast forward 6 months, it is back and doing the same things, and I can't explain why. Here's the deal:
With or without all other circuits unsoldered/disconnected, including the heaters and the bias, and anything past the rectifier diodes, it does this:
AC from each leg of the secondary is 340, so I'm getting 340-0-340.. That should give me 476vDC ish after the rectifier diodes (1.4x340v). But it doesn't. With nothing else connected the end of the diode chain reads 306VDC with about 4VAC ripple. Ok, so some of those old silver diodes test funny, I can't think of why else I'm not getting 1.4x340 at the end, so I replace the diodes. Nope. Same readings. Huh? I pulled apart the eyelet board for the rectifier (mains and bias), cleaned it up, tested for conductivity (none) at the same time I replaced the diodes. No difference.
Checked the center tap connection. It was gimpy, so I got out the big gun and re-soldered it. Tight and solid. No joy, same results.
Now here's the kicker. With no power tubes installed, standby off so nothing but the first bank of caps is in place, the voltage measures: 320VDC and ......120VAC.
WTF?
Keep in mind, neither heaters nor bias are now connected.
1) So why am I not seeing 1.4x340 at the end of my diode chain?
2) How the hell can the VDC go up with the 1st bank of caps connected AND the VAC shoot from 4VAC ripple up to 120VAC??
Doesn't make any sense at all. Any ideas?
That 120VAC showing up with the 1st cap bank connected makes me think maybe a primary leg came disconnected somewhere, but everything seems tight unless somehow inside the PT it came disconnected and I can't see the break. No idea how to confirm that short of replacing the PT, and I don't have a spare Twin PT laying around.
Fast forward 6 months, it is back and doing the same things, and I can't explain why. Here's the deal:
With or without all other circuits unsoldered/disconnected, including the heaters and the bias, and anything past the rectifier diodes, it does this:
AC from each leg of the secondary is 340, so I'm getting 340-0-340.. That should give me 476vDC ish after the rectifier diodes (1.4x340v). But it doesn't. With nothing else connected the end of the diode chain reads 306VDC with about 4VAC ripple. Ok, so some of those old silver diodes test funny, I can't think of why else I'm not getting 1.4x340 at the end, so I replace the diodes. Nope. Same readings. Huh? I pulled apart the eyelet board for the rectifier (mains and bias), cleaned it up, tested for conductivity (none) at the same time I replaced the diodes. No difference.
Checked the center tap connection. It was gimpy, so I got out the big gun and re-soldered it. Tight and solid. No joy, same results.
Now here's the kicker. With no power tubes installed, standby off so nothing but the first bank of caps is in place, the voltage measures: 320VDC and ......120VAC.
WTF?
Keep in mind, neither heaters nor bias are now connected.
1) So why am I not seeing 1.4x340 at the end of my diode chain?
2) How the hell can the VDC go up with the 1st bank of caps connected AND the VAC shoot from 4VAC ripple up to 120VAC??
Doesn't make any sense at all. Any ideas?
That 120VAC showing up with the 1st cap bank connected makes me think maybe a primary leg came disconnected somewhere, but everything seems tight unless somehow inside the PT it came disconnected and I can't see the break. No idea how to confirm that short of replacing the PT, and I don't have a spare Twin PT laying around.
Comment