Hi all,
I've got an original BF Princeton Reverb on my bench. It arrived with one dead 6V6 power tube and a blown fuse. I examined the power amp and power supply, put in a new fuse and new pair of 6V6 power tubes and started testing. The bias supply needed some attention. One resistor had drifted too high (replaced) and I also replaced the bias set resistor as the bias was set a little too high, now lowered to the mid-20 mAs per tube. This amp uses the 5AR4A/GZ34 rectifier tubes, as do the early BF Princeton Reverb amps and I noticed the B+ is pretty high in this particular amp, about 425~430 Vdc, depending on the various 5AR4A rectifier tubes I subbed in. I subbed in different rectifiers for two reasons, 1) the 5AR4A rectifier that was in the amp when it arrived (a Mesa Boogie branded tube) looked a little cloudy/foggy inside the bottle (but very minor) and that had me take notice. 2) I thought I saw some arc-ing inside the rectifier bottle which instantly blew a fuse. The power transformer seems fine, drawing no current when unloaded (all tubes removed) and the filter caps are new (the cap can is not wired up, although present). The first filter cap is rated at 450 Vdc and I wondered if I I need a 500 volt rated cap in its place and if that could be the cause of the arc-ing inside the rectifier tube, as there is not much headroom between the B+ voltage and the first filter cap rating. It also did the same thing again with another known-good 5AR4A rectifier tube, blowing a fuse again. The bias circuit is stable and delivering expected voltages, the screen grid resistors are new and measure spot-on. The screen voltage on the power tubes is about 12 volts below the grid voltage. This arc-ing, fuse blowing is not happening all the time but occasionally, infrequently, but it's got to be solved, nonetheless.
What are some of the conditions that can cause arc-ing in a rectifier tube?
Thanks for your advice and expertise,
Bob M.
I've got an original BF Princeton Reverb on my bench. It arrived with one dead 6V6 power tube and a blown fuse. I examined the power amp and power supply, put in a new fuse and new pair of 6V6 power tubes and started testing. The bias supply needed some attention. One resistor had drifted too high (replaced) and I also replaced the bias set resistor as the bias was set a little too high, now lowered to the mid-20 mAs per tube. This amp uses the 5AR4A/GZ34 rectifier tubes, as do the early BF Princeton Reverb amps and I noticed the B+ is pretty high in this particular amp, about 425~430 Vdc, depending on the various 5AR4A rectifier tubes I subbed in. I subbed in different rectifiers for two reasons, 1) the 5AR4A rectifier that was in the amp when it arrived (a Mesa Boogie branded tube) looked a little cloudy/foggy inside the bottle (but very minor) and that had me take notice. 2) I thought I saw some arc-ing inside the rectifier bottle which instantly blew a fuse. The power transformer seems fine, drawing no current when unloaded (all tubes removed) and the filter caps are new (the cap can is not wired up, although present). The first filter cap is rated at 450 Vdc and I wondered if I I need a 500 volt rated cap in its place and if that could be the cause of the arc-ing inside the rectifier tube, as there is not much headroom between the B+ voltage and the first filter cap rating. It also did the same thing again with another known-good 5AR4A rectifier tube, blowing a fuse again. The bias circuit is stable and delivering expected voltages, the screen grid resistors are new and measure spot-on. The screen voltage on the power tubes is about 12 volts below the grid voltage. This arc-ing, fuse blowing is not happening all the time but occasionally, infrequently, but it's got to be solved, nonetheless.
What are some of the conditions that can cause arc-ing in a rectifier tube?
Thanks for your advice and expertise,
Bob M.
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