I have a Hiwatt Custom 50W Amp SSD504 on the bench, and when I first looked at it early last week, I found excessive rectifier commutation noise coupled into the input stages. I have since replace the 1N4007 1A 800V rectifiers with UF5408 3A/1kv rectifiers, along with changing the bias rectifier to a UF4007 from a 1N4007, just to be thorough. It also was missing one of the ballast resistors, and not having yet received the incoming 1W carbon film resistors from Farnell UK, I swapped out the 220k/1W on the first filter stage, replacing those with 100k/2W MO, which gave me a spare 220k 1W resistor for the ballast resistor across the next series-coupled cap array.
Yesterday, having set the Custom 100W amp aside, I moved this back to the bench to see if I had made any progress with the rectifier buzz on the output. Those changes didn't make any difference. I read thru numerous posts on Rectifier Noise in our archives, found one on a Fender AB763 deluxe build, and read the post R.G. had submitted, advising the HT C/T lead MUST BE connected to the bottom of the first Filter Stage, rather than just to Chassis Ground. In this chassis, the HT fuse is in series with the C/T, and was wired to chassis ground just below the fuse holder (bottom view). I disconnected that, and laid in an insulated wire from the HT fuse terminal to the bottom of the filter cap array where it ties to chassis ground. Checked the results, but still made no difference.
I next looked at the input grounding, and compared that to the Custom 100W amp. I don't have this coupled rectifier buzz on the Custom 100W amp...at least orders of magnitude lower. Looking at the two amps' input grounding, maybe I could improve upon this.
This slight wiring revision on the Custom 50W now looks close to that of the 100W amp. I did remove the single-hole ground lug and replaced it with a #6 dual-hole solder lug, and first tied the pots ground buss to it, then that from the input jacks, and finally that from the two cathode resistors of the input stage tube, reducing the loop area from where I started. Though I had doubts this would make any significant change. It made no difference....I still have the same degree of rectifier buzz.
The power tubes installed in this amp are KT77's, matched, set for 35mA plate current. Just to see if it made any difference, I replaced those with a matched pair of EL34's, same plate current. That too made no difference. Below is an inside view of the full chassis.
I don't have any high voltage ceramic caps that could be used across the HT rectifier diodes at present. If that sounds like a sensible plan, what value would you recommend? 10nF/1KV? 0.1uF/1KV? On the cabinet, there is adhesive-backed aluminum ground plane that gets tied in once the chassis mtg screws are anchored. That hasn't cured this either.
I don't see the rectifier buzz on the power supply lines, having looked from HT1 thru HT5 supply potentials. I've attached the schematic, with Pin numbers and voltages present below
Yesterday, having set the Custom 100W amp aside, I moved this back to the bench to see if I had made any progress with the rectifier buzz on the output. Those changes didn't make any difference. I read thru numerous posts on Rectifier Noise in our archives, found one on a Fender AB763 deluxe build, and read the post R.G. had submitted, advising the HT C/T lead MUST BE connected to the bottom of the first Filter Stage, rather than just to Chassis Ground. In this chassis, the HT fuse is in series with the C/T, and was wired to chassis ground just below the fuse holder (bottom view). I disconnected that, and laid in an insulated wire from the HT fuse terminal to the bottom of the filter cap array where it ties to chassis ground. Checked the results, but still made no difference.
I next looked at the input grounding, and compared that to the Custom 100W amp. I don't have this coupled rectifier buzz on the Custom 100W amp...at least orders of magnitude lower. Looking at the two amps' input grounding, maybe I could improve upon this.
This slight wiring revision on the Custom 50W now looks close to that of the 100W amp. I did remove the single-hole ground lug and replaced it with a #6 dual-hole solder lug, and first tied the pots ground buss to it, then that from the input jacks, and finally that from the two cathode resistors of the input stage tube, reducing the loop area from where I started. Though I had doubts this would make any significant change. It made no difference....I still have the same degree of rectifier buzz.
The power tubes installed in this amp are KT77's, matched, set for 35mA plate current. Just to see if it made any difference, I replaced those with a matched pair of EL34's, same plate current. That too made no difference. Below is an inside view of the full chassis.
I don't have any high voltage ceramic caps that could be used across the HT rectifier diodes at present. If that sounds like a sensible plan, what value would you recommend? 10nF/1KV? 0.1uF/1KV? On the cabinet, there is adhesive-backed aluminum ground plane that gets tied in once the chassis mtg screws are anchored. That hasn't cured this either.
I don't see the rectifier buzz on the power supply lines, having looked from HT1 thru HT5 supply potentials. I've attached the schematic, with Pin numbers and voltages present below
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