Hi,
I convinced myself to get rid of the old selenium rectifier in the bias circuit of an old Dukane 1U460 PA. It was still working but I know they're famous for failing after so many years.
So I installed a IN4007 silicon diode in place, also replacing the two old 20/150 caps with 22/450 double checking proper polarity (+ to ground).
The diode cathode (marked side) was soldered on the - side according to the schematic.
When I switched on the amp (no power tubes for safety reasons) I measured a totally different bias voltage: -26.80V (selenium, tubes installed) vs. +9V (IN4007, no tubes). It looks like the bias circuit is now far from specs.
Did I assume it was too easy? Can you see any big mistake in what I did? At this point I guess the original resistors values do not match the new scenario with IN4007 diode.
Any tip?
Thanks.
I convinced myself to get rid of the old selenium rectifier in the bias circuit of an old Dukane 1U460 PA. It was still working but I know they're famous for failing after so many years.
So I installed a IN4007 silicon diode in place, also replacing the two old 20/150 caps with 22/450 double checking proper polarity (+ to ground).
The diode cathode (marked side) was soldered on the - side according to the schematic.
When I switched on the amp (no power tubes for safety reasons) I measured a totally different bias voltage: -26.80V (selenium, tubes installed) vs. +9V (IN4007, no tubes). It looks like the bias circuit is now far from specs.
Did I assume it was too easy? Can you see any big mistake in what I did? At this point I guess the original resistors values do not match the new scenario with IN4007 diode.
Any tip?
Thanks.
Comment