Originally posted by Helmholtz
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The Official Dual Rail Thread
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If I have a 50% chance of guessing the right answer, I guess wrong 80% of the time.
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Originally posted by loudthud View PostFusing idea: Install a 1N4007 such that the plate supply draws current from the screen supply (and through the screen supply fuse) when the plate supply fuse blows. The plate supply can never go lower than a diode drop below the screen supply. I see this all the time in test systems with multiple power supplys primarily for analog circuitry.
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Originally posted by nevetslab View Post
That's what Audio Research has in their aged D70 Stereo Tube Power Amp that I just received from MEF member sgelectric. Amp has two pairs of 6550's with a third 6550 as part of the regulated screen supply. At present, the screen supply is blowing fuses, so I'll have to dig into circuits to find the cause and solution. I'll post schematics when I get a chance.
D70 Mk II Schematics.pdf
I was able to obtain the Owner's Manual for the D70, which had the adjustment procedure for the Supply Regulator per channel. That's posted here:
D70_Manual.pdf
Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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Originally posted by black_labb View Posti guess the issue is really the dynamic effects on the power supply. if you are running the plates at high voltages, you will need to have the screens running lower.
using separate supplies for the plate and the screens avoids all these problems. you just need a second rectifier. one winding is rectified to feed to the plates, the other is rectified and fed to the grids
the things to consider are
- ensure that the way you fuse the power supply is done in a way that the grid supply will be shut off if the plate supply is. if the grid supply is on when the plate supply is off you will blow your output tubes very quickly. not cheap when you have 3 pairs of 6550's or similar in a monster amp.
The only thing though is that I can't really see much of a difference between the floating and the FWB doubler arrangements. Either way the screens are pulling from one cap while the plates are pulling from both while the caps are getting charged to 1/2 the total plate supply voltage. The only difference I see is that the FWB doubler resembles a grounded center tap rectifier whereas the floated arrangement FWB rectifies both windings.
The other thing too is that the only way I can see to fuse both supplies with 1 fuse would be to fuse the ground feed from the negative side of the supply. I know that's not "standard practice" but it's the only way I can see to have a fuse that's common to both supplies.
Later on in this post, R.G. got involved in the discussion to suggest creating a MosFET Screen Supply derived from the HT supply. That's what I was looking for.....a solution to make use of the large heat sink in this Blackstar PSU from their S200 Bass Amp that I inherited and am building up as a KT88 Power tube test fixture for screening/sorting used Power Tube pulls, accumulated over the past 13 years, while the cost of power tubes has been impacted by Putin's war on Ukraine and the US Sanctions on Russia has made life 'interesting' for folks keeping backline gear running.
In Wilder Amplifications later post after much discussion with R.G, Steve Conner and others in this very interesting & well-thought out thread, this circuit evloved:
09-10-2010, 09:20 PM
OK...here's the scheme I've come up with for the Dual Rail PSU utilizing the transformers I originally had wound for this thing. Included pretty much every idea from this thread in it. Anything else that we feel needs to be added feel free to contribute.
A bit overengineered?
Jon Wilder
Wilder Amplification
So, I have a lot of information now and several directions to go, besides just settling with the cobbled two-power-transformer solution to achieve the separate HT and Screen Supply, off of which is the Driver and Preamp stages of the Hiwatt DR201 amp circuit that I'm in the process of building into this discarded Stage Prop Blackstar S200 amp.
I just love what can be found and re-discovered here on this forum!!
Last edited by nevetslab; 07-05-2022, 01:53 AM.Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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