Two days ago I was taking this last winter's project out for a test run at full volume, as the missus was not at home. This is a 2x 6V6 amp, kind of a mashup of a BF princeton or Tweed Deluxe power section, with switchable NFB. Had a dirt box in front, driving the amp into heavy grind territory. When suddenly there was a drop in volume for a few seconds, then the mains fuse blew (1.0A time delay). A sniff check seemed OK, and shooting the tubes with an IR thermometer revealed about 200F on the plates in the few minutes that had elapsed since the event.
I had convinced myself that a screen collapse and g2-cathode fault could have drawn enough current to blow the primary fuse. Examination of the circuit board did not show any charred components, and what I tested - screen resistors, cathode resistor, rectifier diodes, power supply caps (testing no short to ground), power supply node resistors - all OK. Power up, all tubes out, on a light bulb limiter, lamp shone brightly. Rats.
measuring PT secondary winding resistance - first in circuit and then out - revealed 43R red-red/yel (CT) on one side, and 163R on the other. Oddly enough, red-red measures about 120R, less than the one side to CT. The nominal winding resistance is about 170R each side.
Hammond 270CX PT spec sheet here
The PT is rated for 550v @ 75ma = 41.25VA
2 x6V6 may pull 12W each diss plus 18W (yeah, I'm optimistic!) audio power for 42W
Seems like the right PT for the application
Is this kind of failure attributable to specific causes? or is this a simple infant mortality? I have contacted Hammond with a nice email, asking what their tech dept thinks. I'm more concerned with spec'ing the right PT for this amp than anything else. Comments?
edit: a quick check of the output tubes (LBL, then a floating guitar cable "noise" test - nice and buzzy, even on the LBL) in a champ suggests no problems with the tubes. Also the OT resistance check seems OK at about 200R each side.
Hammond 1760H OT spec sheet here
So I'm thinking the HV winding short was the problem, not a symptom. Reality check?
I had convinced myself that a screen collapse and g2-cathode fault could have drawn enough current to blow the primary fuse. Examination of the circuit board did not show any charred components, and what I tested - screen resistors, cathode resistor, rectifier diodes, power supply caps (testing no short to ground), power supply node resistors - all OK. Power up, all tubes out, on a light bulb limiter, lamp shone brightly. Rats.
measuring PT secondary winding resistance - first in circuit and then out - revealed 43R red-red/yel (CT) on one side, and 163R on the other. Oddly enough, red-red measures about 120R, less than the one side to CT. The nominal winding resistance is about 170R each side.
Hammond 270CX PT spec sheet here
The PT is rated for 550v @ 75ma = 41.25VA
2 x6V6 may pull 12W each diss plus 18W (yeah, I'm optimistic!) audio power for 42W
Seems like the right PT for the application
Is this kind of failure attributable to specific causes? or is this a simple infant mortality? I have contacted Hammond with a nice email, asking what their tech dept thinks. I'm more concerned with spec'ing the right PT for this amp than anything else. Comments?
edit: a quick check of the output tubes (LBL, then a floating guitar cable "noise" test - nice and buzzy, even on the LBL) in a champ suggests no problems with the tubes. Also the OT resistance check seems OK at about 200R each side.
Hammond 1760H OT spec sheet here
So I'm thinking the HV winding short was the problem, not a symptom. Reality check?
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