ive have been reading recently on sites like valvewizard to better understand the different sections of guitar / bass amps.
i just finished reading about rectifier and power supply design, but there is no dedicated "read" on bias supply. ill start with a marsha!! / soldano style bias supply as an example because its what im most familiar with to this point.
when designing your power suppy, i understand that you want to begin with determining your p.t. specs first, then you know how to set up the circuit.
2204 used a c.t. high voltage secondary, and so used a full wave rectifier, and tapped the bias off the h.v. as there was no dedicated bias secondary,
the 2203 p.t. had a dedicated secondary for the bias, and used a bridge rectifier with a non-center tapped h.v. secondary.
this all i understand, which leads me to my questions about the specific resistors / capacitors in the bias supply.
i am trying to wrap my head around determining the changes in resistor / cap values when certain other elements change, for example.
ive been looking at schematics for soldano avenger 50, and slo 100.
both are tapped off the h.v. (360vac?) but the avenger has a
100k dropping res - diode - 10k smoothing res - 15k range res in series with a 25k pot - and 2 x 22u caps,
and the slo has a 220k dropping res - diode - 15k smoothing res - 56k range res in series with a 25k pot - and 2 x 10u caps.
both amps use 5881/6l6 tubes, so my question is why the different value of res / caps?
is it because one is 50w, one is 100w?
shouldnt they both need to reach the same neg voltage at the end of the bias supply, unless the h.v. is not the same on both, i am confused!
my other question is if the caps in combination with the resistors are what achieve the final neg voltage? the avenger bias has aprox half the total resistance, but double the capacitance of the slo, or am i just thinking about this all wrong?
ultimately im trying to understand a logic that applies from using one voltage source, that may apply when using another voltage source, ie a 360v h.v. tap vs a dedicated 100v secondary.
thx
i just finished reading about rectifier and power supply design, but there is no dedicated "read" on bias supply. ill start with a marsha!! / soldano style bias supply as an example because its what im most familiar with to this point.
when designing your power suppy, i understand that you want to begin with determining your p.t. specs first, then you know how to set up the circuit.
2204 used a c.t. high voltage secondary, and so used a full wave rectifier, and tapped the bias off the h.v. as there was no dedicated bias secondary,
the 2203 p.t. had a dedicated secondary for the bias, and used a bridge rectifier with a non-center tapped h.v. secondary.
this all i understand, which leads me to my questions about the specific resistors / capacitors in the bias supply.
i am trying to wrap my head around determining the changes in resistor / cap values when certain other elements change, for example.
ive been looking at schematics for soldano avenger 50, and slo 100.
both are tapped off the h.v. (360vac?) but the avenger has a
100k dropping res - diode - 10k smoothing res - 15k range res in series with a 25k pot - and 2 x 22u caps,
and the slo has a 220k dropping res - diode - 15k smoothing res - 56k range res in series with a 25k pot - and 2 x 10u caps.
both amps use 5881/6l6 tubes, so my question is why the different value of res / caps?
is it because one is 50w, one is 100w?
shouldnt they both need to reach the same neg voltage at the end of the bias supply, unless the h.v. is not the same on both, i am confused!
my other question is if the caps in combination with the resistors are what achieve the final neg voltage? the avenger bias has aprox half the total resistance, but double the capacitance of the slo, or am i just thinking about this all wrong?
ultimately im trying to understand a logic that applies from using one voltage source, that may apply when using another voltage source, ie a 360v h.v. tap vs a dedicated 100v secondary.
thx
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