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The Official Dual Rail Thread
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I once watched and took notes while a fellow derived Maxwell's Equations on a black board (this was before whiteboards) in 50 minutes, start to finish.
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Originally posted by Gregg View PostIf you're talking about Maxwell's original 20 quaternion equations with 20 variables 50 min is a very good timeAmazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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What exactly did he derive them from?
The whole point of Maxwell's equations is that he discovered them. Or at least, he took the existing equations for electric and magnetic fields: Gauss's law, Ampere's law and so on, and added one new term, displacement current. There was no mathematical way to derive that new term, he must just have decided to try it for fun. He probably just liked the idea, that if he assumed the existence of displacement current, the whole mess could be put into the form of a wave equation, and he could have electromagnetic waves.
In Maxwell's day, there was no equipment capable of measuring displacement current, but now we deal with it every day. (It's what makes your guitar hum louder when you take your hands off the strings.)"Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"
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The original Maxwell equations are describing very complex phenomena which are still not well known to modern physics (or according to some deliberately left out). Because the equations were too complex they were reduced later mainly by Heaviside to the well known few equations. Even Lorentz had to do some "reducing" to get rid of some phenomena initially included by Maxwell in his original equations.
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So, back on topic. I bought a bag of SPP04N80C3 before they were listed as obsolete- maybe because they were cheap. They're a 4 amp 800 volt part. I have a few transformers that result in plate voltages in the 500 to 550 volt range- a little too high for the screens of some of the tubes I intend to use. I'm going to make a super simple zener + mosfet screen voltage regulator and see how it goes! I figure I should be able to easily get 75 or so watts from 6L6's or EL34's depending on output impedance.
Jamie
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Resurrecting an old thread from 2010
Originally posted by Wilder Amplification View PostWell since my OT Plate Load thread kinda morphed into that, I figured I'd start a separate thread dedicated to dual rail technology...
Thanks!
Steve AholaThe Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
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Originally posted by Steve Conner View PostI think it's best to think of a so-called "dual rail" amp as just an ordinary amp with the following modifications:
Add on an extra, higher voltage supply just for the plates, and increase the OT load impedance.
You could modify any amp in this way, there are no special requirements.
If you doubled the plate supply voltage, and doubled the load impedance, you'd get twice the output power from the same tubes. But with the following caveats:
1) Too much voltage and things (OT, tubes, tube sockets) might arc and break down.
2) You have to bias it colder, because doubling the plate voltage also doubles the idle power dissipation for a given idle current. This will affect the tone.
My experience with dual rails was with my old Ninja Toaster design. I started with a PT that gave 550V DC, and thought this was too high. So I installed a MOSFET-based regulator with two outputs: 475V for the plates and 360 for the screens. I also had a 6.6k OT, and this worked great with EL34s giving exactly 50 watts with a 1k shared screen resistor.
But with 6L6s it would only give 30W. I installed a switch to bump the screen voltage up to 475, and this gave 50 watts with 6L6s. But flipping this switch with EL34s installed, they tried to make nearly 70W with an impressive light show of glowing screens.
It works with every tube I've tried, from 6V6s to KT88s, on one setting or the other. Well apart from those CV4060s I bought on Ebay, which were a complete disaster. Those would be great for dual-rail amps, because they need a REALLY low screen voltage: even 360 was too high. People sell them as 6550 replacements, but that's misleading, they're more like a 6146B without a top cap.
CV4060 / S11E12 / VX6114
I'm currently using the Sovtek "Tung-Sol 6550s" on the 360V setting, and get about 60W. Oddly I get the same power whether I use an 8 ohm or a 16 ohm load, but that suits me fine because the OT only has one tap.
Lately I turned the regulated voltage down to about 400V, because since I started using the larger tubes, the regulator dropped out and sagged that low under heavy load anyway. That would decrease the screen voltage to about 310, 320.
I've had it for 10 years and I've never seen it blow a power tube yet. I guess one day it will happen and, as per Murphy's law, take the MOSFETs with it.
People say that an amp with a regulated power supply must sound bad, but I've always enjoyed playing it.
I get about 570v before load & 458v loading right at on set of clipping or 72w. Before it was 36w with KT77's and the old 390v PT.
Thanks. JC
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