Hi All,
I'm just finalizing a schematic for a new single-ended build of mine, and I wanted to ask a couple of questions.
1 - this will be an amp head, so has a speaker jack and an impedance selector switch. But because it's a head, i'm worried that it is more likely to be accidently run with no speaker connected/plugged in to the jack.
I'm using an insulated mono Cliff style speaker jack, with switching on both terminals. When a plug is inserted, both contacts are open, when there is no plug, both contacts are closed. I was wondering if this gave me a chance to put a resistor across these terminals to act as an emergency load in case of no speaker being plugged in, to protect the OT etc.
Do people do this? Is there more to it than this?
The two impedances available to the speaker jack will be 4 and 8 ohms, and the amp puts out a max of 10W. So I was planning on using a 5.6 ohm/10W resistor for the job.
2 - Bleeder resistors. They sound like a good idea to me. I am using 3 filter caps (all 47 uF), 2 of which are isolated from the HT when in standby mode. So I figure that I have to put a bleeder resistor in parallel with at least 1 cap in each of the 2 standby zones. My voltages are ~ 350v down to 280V across the power supply. If I use 1Meg resistors, 0.5W, how long will it take to discharge? Should I use a lower resistance/higher wattage?
Thanks for any assistance
I'm just finalizing a schematic for a new single-ended build of mine, and I wanted to ask a couple of questions.
1 - this will be an amp head, so has a speaker jack and an impedance selector switch. But because it's a head, i'm worried that it is more likely to be accidently run with no speaker connected/plugged in to the jack.
I'm using an insulated mono Cliff style speaker jack, with switching on both terminals. When a plug is inserted, both contacts are open, when there is no plug, both contacts are closed. I was wondering if this gave me a chance to put a resistor across these terminals to act as an emergency load in case of no speaker being plugged in, to protect the OT etc.
Do people do this? Is there more to it than this?
The two impedances available to the speaker jack will be 4 and 8 ohms, and the amp puts out a max of 10W. So I was planning on using a 5.6 ohm/10W resistor for the job.
2 - Bleeder resistors. They sound like a good idea to me. I am using 3 filter caps (all 47 uF), 2 of which are isolated from the HT when in standby mode. So I figure that I have to put a bleeder resistor in parallel with at least 1 cap in each of the 2 standby zones. My voltages are ~ 350v down to 280V across the power supply. If I use 1Meg resistors, 0.5W, how long will it take to discharge? Should I use a lower resistance/higher wattage?
Thanks for any assistance
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