At this point the OP is probably banging his head on the workbench wondering what he did to cause all this. I liked my original answer. "It'll be fine"
Originally posted by Helmholtz
To the OP the difference is an estimated 15s or a simulated 10s bias ramp up.
That's what I thought at first, without any math. Just make sure you let the amp warm up sufficiently before switching standby to 'GO' mode, and all will be well. Plus a reduction in background hum which is often a bugaboo with lightly filtered bias supplies.
I found PSUD2 to be a convenient tool to simulate the bias ramp up. As expected I could fully confirm nickb's results.
(Also gave me reason to read up on Thevenin equivalents. Thanks again, Nick!)
How many extra seconds for the 47uF compared to the 8uF? I think I'm mis-reading post #15.
See post #12 for the answer. It depends on what you define as the measurement point 90% of final value, or 10% to 90%, or.... There's a graph so you can chose your points.
PS: The executive summary is that after 10 seconds they are pretty much the same.
How many extra seconds for the 47uF compared to the 8uF? I think I'm mis-reading post #15.
From Nick's simulation in post #12 (green curves) it looks as if it takes less than twice as long with the 47µ to reach an intermediate voltage value as compared to 8µ.
E.g. -20V is reached after 5s with 8µ and after 9s with 47µ.
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