Hi all,
I have just finished building a DR103 clone from scratch, using parts I had lying around. All I had to do was buy a capacitor; it cost me 4 british pounds. I could not believe it when I turned it on and it actually worked (and sounded great...)
In a similar mindset, I am going to try building an amp of my own design. I've never done this before, so bear with me!
I have an Accutronics reverb tank, code 8BC1C1B. Decoding this, it has a 190 ohm input impedance, and a 12k ohm output impedance. I want to drive this with a 12ax7. I understand that to do this, I should get a transformer that matches the output impedance of the 12ax7 with the input impedance of the tank.
So I've done some maths (please tell me if it's not correct!):
O/p impedance of 12ax7 is 70k in parallel with plate resistor.
Using a 100k plate resistor: 41k
Impedance Ratio is 41000:190, or about 215:1
To get the turns ratio, take the square root of this = 14.7
240V / 14.7 = 16.3
So if I found a 240V to 16V transformer, I could use this as a reverb driver?
Also, what kind of power should the transformer be able to handle?
Any suggestions are much appreciated!
Thanks,
Harry.
I have just finished building a DR103 clone from scratch, using parts I had lying around. All I had to do was buy a capacitor; it cost me 4 british pounds. I could not believe it when I turned it on and it actually worked (and sounded great...)
In a similar mindset, I am going to try building an amp of my own design. I've never done this before, so bear with me!
I have an Accutronics reverb tank, code 8BC1C1B. Decoding this, it has a 190 ohm input impedance, and a 12k ohm output impedance. I want to drive this with a 12ax7. I understand that to do this, I should get a transformer that matches the output impedance of the 12ax7 with the input impedance of the tank.
So I've done some maths (please tell me if it's not correct!):
O/p impedance of 12ax7 is 70k in parallel with plate resistor.
Using a 100k plate resistor: 41k
Impedance Ratio is 41000:190, or about 215:1
To get the turns ratio, take the square root of this = 14.7
240V / 14.7 = 16.3
So if I found a 240V to 16V transformer, I could use this as a reverb driver?
Also, what kind of power should the transformer be able to handle?
Any suggestions are much appreciated!
Thanks,
Harry.
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