I've been looking at the power supply schematics for the JTM45 and Hiwatt DR504, particularly at the fusing arrangement for the HT secondary.
Though the JTM45 uses a GZ34 and the Hiwatt uses diodes, they seem fairly similar to my eyes in nominal voltages, power amp configuration, biasing arrangement, and output power. In particular, both amps have the HT fuse in series with the grounded center-tap of the HT secondary winding, and both amps pull the bias voltage off of one side of the HT secondary, through diode/voltage divider/filter cap arrangement, and then off to the bias feed resistors.
I've read the Valve Wizard stuff on fusing and rectifiers, which was helpful.
So I have a couple of questions:
1. What happens a.) on the bias supply and b.) on the HT line when the CT HT fuse blows? It seems like the bias voltage would go to twice its normal value given an ideal transformer. What really happens here? What's the voltage on the HT line if the fuse blows and the HT winding is floating?
(I'm confused about whether the bias supply could become a ground reference, and whether this could endanger components in either the bias circuit or on the HT. Is there any reason that there's a series resistor BEFORE the diode in the bias supply? Would having the diode before the resistors/voltage divider make any difference?)
2. Given the similarities in the two circuits, why is the Hiwatt's HT fuse a 1A and the JTM45's only 500mA? The Hiwatt can't be pulling twice as much current for only 5 additional watts. Is it because the Hiwatt's diode rectifier doesn't limit current like the GZ34, and a higher value fuse avoids nuisance fuse-blows?
JTM45 schem:
http://www.drtube.com/schematics/marshall/jtm45tr.gif
DR504 schem:
http://www.drtube.com/schematics/hiwatt/hwpsu2.gif
http://www.drtube.com/schematics/hiwatt/hwpwr50w.gif
Though the JTM45 uses a GZ34 and the Hiwatt uses diodes, they seem fairly similar to my eyes in nominal voltages, power amp configuration, biasing arrangement, and output power. In particular, both amps have the HT fuse in series with the grounded center-tap of the HT secondary winding, and both amps pull the bias voltage off of one side of the HT secondary, through diode/voltage divider/filter cap arrangement, and then off to the bias feed resistors.
I've read the Valve Wizard stuff on fusing and rectifiers, which was helpful.
So I have a couple of questions:
1. What happens a.) on the bias supply and b.) on the HT line when the CT HT fuse blows? It seems like the bias voltage would go to twice its normal value given an ideal transformer. What really happens here? What's the voltage on the HT line if the fuse blows and the HT winding is floating?
(I'm confused about whether the bias supply could become a ground reference, and whether this could endanger components in either the bias circuit or on the HT. Is there any reason that there's a series resistor BEFORE the diode in the bias supply? Would having the diode before the resistors/voltage divider make any difference?)
2. Given the similarities in the two circuits, why is the Hiwatt's HT fuse a 1A and the JTM45's only 500mA? The Hiwatt can't be pulling twice as much current for only 5 additional watts. Is it because the Hiwatt's diode rectifier doesn't limit current like the GZ34, and a higher value fuse avoids nuisance fuse-blows?
JTM45 schem:
http://www.drtube.com/schematics/marshall/jtm45tr.gif
DR504 schem:
http://www.drtube.com/schematics/hiwatt/hwpsu2.gif
http://www.drtube.com/schematics/hiwatt/hwpwr50w.gif
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