Just wondering here... I've read before that an artificial center tap is potentially quieter by way of being able to use perfectly matched 100R transistor to have the ground reference perfectly centered.
Is this still with modern not-so-bad-tolerance power transformers? (In my case a Hammond 290MX)
I'm asking this because I did put two 100R resistors on my board and referenced them to the top of the cathode resistors (cathode biased amp) for some DC elevation.
Now, the PT, despite being a lay-down style with soldering tabs, still has the filament supply on hardwired massive 18 gauge wires. Just feels kind of weird to just cut and heat shrink that big center tap wire and rely on a pair of resistors instead.
I guess I could try the PT's center tap first and see if it hums...
I used it on my Marshall style build and I'm always surprised how quiet it is (Hammond 290GX PT).
On that note: anything inherently inferior about referencing the CT (artificial or not) to the top of the cathode resistor? Easy enough to do and gives a free roughly 10V of DC elevation, but I'm wondering if the occasional bias shift under hard transients might have an effect down the line on preamp tubes.
Is this still with modern not-so-bad-tolerance power transformers? (In my case a Hammond 290MX)
I'm asking this because I did put two 100R resistors on my board and referenced them to the top of the cathode resistors (cathode biased amp) for some DC elevation.
Now, the PT, despite being a lay-down style with soldering tabs, still has the filament supply on hardwired massive 18 gauge wires. Just feels kind of weird to just cut and heat shrink that big center tap wire and rely on a pair of resistors instead.
I guess I could try the PT's center tap first and see if it hums...
I used it on my Marshall style build and I'm always surprised how quiet it is (Hammond 290GX PT).
On that note: anything inherently inferior about referencing the CT (artificial or not) to the top of the cathode resistor? Easy enough to do and gives a free roughly 10V of DC elevation, but I'm wondering if the occasional bias shift under hard transients might have an effect down the line on preamp tubes.
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