I've been looking at various schemes for dropping B+, and after I a while I realized that I've reinvented the SMPS a couple times. It occurs to me that 1) the old timers did this with mechanical vibrators, 2) most of the math and a large portion of the modes of self destruction all revolve around energy storage. My latest ruminations are:
1) Commercial 12V SMPS abound for cheap. This gives you a) heater supply (running your 6.3v heaters in series for the big bottle stuff), b) isolation and filtering (the stuff going back to the line), c) regulation. It's within 5% on supply voltage - so your tubes will have enough to start flinging electrons, and maybe actually increase tube life.
2) Run B+ off an unregulated open loop forward converter, powered off the 12V line. Input is regulated. Since we're transforming rather than storing, the requirements relax a bit, and I mostly care about finding something in the right turns ratio and core size.
I keep trying to fit variability into this, just a simple duty cycle reduction, but I think that probably complicates things too much (and output filtering starts sliding from simple filtering into real energy storage - and reintroduces the need for a closed loop system).
Thoughts?
1) Commercial 12V SMPS abound for cheap. This gives you a) heater supply (running your 6.3v heaters in series for the big bottle stuff), b) isolation and filtering (the stuff going back to the line), c) regulation. It's within 5% on supply voltage - so your tubes will have enough to start flinging electrons, and maybe actually increase tube life.
2) Run B+ off an unregulated open loop forward converter, powered off the 12V line. Input is regulated. Since we're transforming rather than storing, the requirements relax a bit, and I mostly care about finding something in the right turns ratio and core size.
I keep trying to fit variability into this, just a simple duty cycle reduction, but I think that probably complicates things too much (and output filtering starts sliding from simple filtering into real energy storage - and reintroduces the need for a closed loop system).
Thoughts?
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