I've got this amp on the bench and it has a broken cap can base but still wired up. The cap can is 40x3 @500v and looks to be original to the amp. There are two other caps that clearly have been replaced by modern caps. One is comprised of two 100mfd x 350V caps in series with a 220k resistor between them, the other is a Sprague Atom 20mfd x 500v.
Looking at the schematic I can see the 3-40mfd x 500v caps and also a 30mfd x 600 cap and a 40mfd x 500v cap.
What I'm guessing is the pair of 100mfd caps in series with the 220k resistor is an attempt to meet the 600v requirement of the schematic. Am I correct that this results in a 50mfd x 700V cap value and what does the resistor do?
The 20mfd x 500V sprague atom is just the wrong value and should have been 40mfd x 500v by my guess.
I've always understood that by connecting two caps in parallel doubles their value but their max voltage stays the same and is a good practice to follow if you don't have the proper cap value.
I've also understood that by connecting two caps in series you cut their value in half but double the max voltage rating but it isn't recommended for reasons I've never understood. I seem the remember something about using a calculated resistor value between the negative of the first cap and the positive of the second cap to help with stability.
My question is where does one find a 600v x 30mfd capacitor? Can building a series pair with a resistor between them be a workable solution?
I'll attach the schematic i'm working from.
thanks for any insight!
Dave
Looking at the schematic I can see the 3-40mfd x 500v caps and also a 30mfd x 600 cap and a 40mfd x 500v cap.
What I'm guessing is the pair of 100mfd caps in series with the 220k resistor is an attempt to meet the 600v requirement of the schematic. Am I correct that this results in a 50mfd x 700V cap value and what does the resistor do?
The 20mfd x 500V sprague atom is just the wrong value and should have been 40mfd x 500v by my guess.
I've always understood that by connecting two caps in parallel doubles their value but their max voltage stays the same and is a good practice to follow if you don't have the proper cap value.
I've also understood that by connecting two caps in series you cut their value in half but double the max voltage rating but it isn't recommended for reasons I've never understood. I seem the remember something about using a calculated resistor value between the negative of the first cap and the positive of the second cap to help with stability.
My question is where does one find a 600v x 30mfd capacitor? Can building a series pair with a resistor between them be a workable solution?
I'll attach the schematic i'm working from.
thanks for any insight!
Dave
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