So I've put together a little amp with a 2 EL84 power section, and now I wan't to make another.
The first one was cathode biased EL84s, which was easy but I'm going to have a crack at using fixed bias on the next one. Mainly because the PT has bias tags on it and it's a shame not to use them.
The PT has a bias supply, which will have 70 available volts (if I use a bridge to rectify the supply).
I want to elevate the heaters because of issues with cathode follower and heater - cathode voltage. When I did this before I used a voltage divider off the main HT. I connected that to two resistors on my heater supply (no centre tap on the transformer).
What I'm wondering is... is there any reason not to use the bias supply for this? I'm aiming to have a bias on the EL84's of something like -10v. So for example if I set the bias at -10v I've got +60v which at the moment is unused. Is there any reason not to use that to elevate the heaters?
The first one was cathode biased EL84s, which was easy but I'm going to have a crack at using fixed bias on the next one. Mainly because the PT has bias tags on it and it's a shame not to use them.
The PT has a bias supply, which will have 70 available volts (if I use a bridge to rectify the supply).
I want to elevate the heaters because of issues with cathode follower and heater - cathode voltage. When I did this before I used a voltage divider off the main HT. I connected that to two resistors on my heater supply (no centre tap on the transformer).
What I'm wondering is... is there any reason not to use the bias supply for this? I'm aiming to have a bias on the EL84's of something like -10v. So for example if I set the bias at -10v I've got +60v which at the moment is unused. Is there any reason not to use that to elevate the heaters?
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