Hi Guys!
There actually is a forum called PowerScale.com, set up by Mickey Corrieri of Soultone Amps, where builders and hobbysists can go to find the truth about power control circuitry and other mods. There are project amps in the works that show complete layout details.
Steve, no one would suspect you work for PV or any other amp company with some of the ranting you've placed here. I don't see any "conspiracy" of manufacturers against hobbyists. What I see - at least what I have an impression of - is resentment you have of not having come up with certain ideas on your own. When you say you want to "stick it to the big guys" you are showing us either that you are having a bad day or your true colours. I hope it is the former. There's all kinds of things I wish I knew more about, or wish I had invented, but I am thankful that someone else had the insight and developed the idea. We can't know everything and to think we should is folly.
Tiago: The protection zeners on your mosfets only have to be unidirectional, so it saves one diode per mosfet. The zener in reverse looks like a simple diode and the voltages are unlikely to ever be in the oppositie polarity in the DC circuit. In an audio amp, back-to-back zeners are placed on source-follower mosfets so as not to clip the drive into the opposite device.
With respect to the original Power Scale circuit:
The heart of it is a single mosfet. Current limiting (one transistor) is added to protect the mosfet from the charging currents of the caps that follow.
The pot sees pulsating DC not filtered DC. So its voltage stress is minimal, despite the scare tactics by the unmentioned.
I don't see how the above is complicated. Even the tracking bias regulator can be done with a single transistor - but two or three devices work much better and none are more than a few cents each.
The new kits use low-voltage filtered DC, which allows easy installation and location of the pot anywhere on the control panel. Current limiting is not required as all the caps are prior to the pass elements.
Have fun
Kevin O'Connor
There actually is a forum called PowerScale.com, set up by Mickey Corrieri of Soultone Amps, where builders and hobbysists can go to find the truth about power control circuitry and other mods. There are project amps in the works that show complete layout details.
Steve, no one would suspect you work for PV or any other amp company with some of the ranting you've placed here. I don't see any "conspiracy" of manufacturers against hobbyists. What I see - at least what I have an impression of - is resentment you have of not having come up with certain ideas on your own. When you say you want to "stick it to the big guys" you are showing us either that you are having a bad day or your true colours. I hope it is the former. There's all kinds of things I wish I knew more about, or wish I had invented, but I am thankful that someone else had the insight and developed the idea. We can't know everything and to think we should is folly.
Tiago: The protection zeners on your mosfets only have to be unidirectional, so it saves one diode per mosfet. The zener in reverse looks like a simple diode and the voltages are unlikely to ever be in the oppositie polarity in the DC circuit. In an audio amp, back-to-back zeners are placed on source-follower mosfets so as not to clip the drive into the opposite device.
With respect to the original Power Scale circuit:
The heart of it is a single mosfet. Current limiting (one transistor) is added to protect the mosfet from the charging currents of the caps that follow.
The pot sees pulsating DC not filtered DC. So its voltage stress is minimal, despite the scare tactics by the unmentioned.
I don't see how the above is complicated. Even the tracking bias regulator can be done with a single transistor - but two or three devices work much better and none are more than a few cents each.
The new kits use low-voltage filtered DC, which allows easy installation and location of the pot anywhere on the control panel. Current limiting is not required as all the caps are prior to the pass elements.
Have fun
Kevin O'Connor
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