I have a vintage Ampeg SVT I need to set the bias on. One of the 6550s white capped and flamed out one of the 3.6 ohm plate fuse resistors. It's back up and running, but I absent mindedly turned the bias adjustments when I was spraying them out (the amp was horridly grimy). It seems one needs a 350 watt 4 ohm dummy load to bias according to Ampeg instructions. The dummy loads I have seen are pretty spendy for how often I will need one.
SO, I'm thinking of buying 8 of these: THS502R0J TE Connectivity / Holsworthy | Mouser
2 ohm 50 watt resistors and wiring them up on a heat sink. One string of 4 in series = 8 ohms 200 watts. Wire another identical string in parallel with the first and I should have 4 ohms, 400 watts, correct?
Now my concern is, is this any more inherently risky then using one major wattage resistor? If any one of those 50 watters opens up, I'm down to 8 ohms 200 watts. Will I notice this if it happens? Because if I don't it won't take long to burn out the other side. My fear is suddenly going to no load under power. Bad news. My thinking is the 50 watters should not get overloaded because even if the amp is capable actually putting out 350 watts with used Russian 6550s, that is about 44 watts per resistor, or 88% of maximum rating.
Does this make sense?
SO, I'm thinking of buying 8 of these: THS502R0J TE Connectivity / Holsworthy | Mouser
2 ohm 50 watt resistors and wiring them up on a heat sink. One string of 4 in series = 8 ohms 200 watts. Wire another identical string in parallel with the first and I should have 4 ohms, 400 watts, correct?
Now my concern is, is this any more inherently risky then using one major wattage resistor? If any one of those 50 watters opens up, I'm down to 8 ohms 200 watts. Will I notice this if it happens? Because if I don't it won't take long to burn out the other side. My fear is suddenly going to no load under power. Bad news. My thinking is the 50 watters should not get overloaded because even if the amp is capable actually putting out 350 watts with used Russian 6550s, that is about 44 watts per resistor, or 88% of maximum rating.
Does this make sense?
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