Hey all,
I'm currently designing a single-channel Vox-ish amp with a quad of 6V6s. Same sort of idea as a Trainwreck Rocket. I'm building this in a donor amp, a 1x12 Crate Steath 50 combo which had a fried PT. The power tubes are going to be cathode-biased, and I'm also going to add switchable sag resistors between the PT secondary and the bridge rectifier (planning on using an Antek PT).
That's a whole mess of heat though, and the chassis and cab are both essentially sealed. edit - basically the chassis is a sealed box, half wood, half metal. The combo itself is open-backed.
For the cathode bias resistors (right now I'm leaning towards individual resistors per tube, possibly zener-assisted) I'd have no problem getting the aluminum-cased resistors and mounting them on the outside of the chassis with the leads covered in heat-shrink. For the sag resistors though, that's no bueno.
So, I could try to find room to mount a fan, or I could bolt these resistors to the inside of the chassis and bolt a heat sink to the outside of the chassis. Or cut a hole in the chassis and mount the heat sink over it and attach the resistors to it somehow.
Hm.
I'm going to have to install a fan, aren't I? Maybe even cut a vent into the cabinet... With the weird layout of the chassis (all the tubes dead center!) I'm not sure how much room I can find for a fan.
Since I'm looking at a couple of watts for the power tube biasing resistors (let's go nuts and say 10W) plus the sag resistors (probably close to another 10W) plus the tubes are hanging down so the heat from the envelopes will be hitting the chassis - how much heat can I expect to be able to pump into the chassis safely? I'm primarily shooting for safety and user comfort here, but component longevity is certainly appealing as well.
This thread has been helpful, as well as confirming my suspicions are somewhat warranted: http://music-electronics-forum.com/t11813/
Anyone have experience with building cathode-biased amps into sealed chassis?
I'm currently designing a single-channel Vox-ish amp with a quad of 6V6s. Same sort of idea as a Trainwreck Rocket. I'm building this in a donor amp, a 1x12 Crate Steath 50 combo which had a fried PT. The power tubes are going to be cathode-biased, and I'm also going to add switchable sag resistors between the PT secondary and the bridge rectifier (planning on using an Antek PT).
That's a whole mess of heat though, and the chassis and cab are both essentially sealed. edit - basically the chassis is a sealed box, half wood, half metal. The combo itself is open-backed.
For the cathode bias resistors (right now I'm leaning towards individual resistors per tube, possibly zener-assisted) I'd have no problem getting the aluminum-cased resistors and mounting them on the outside of the chassis with the leads covered in heat-shrink. For the sag resistors though, that's no bueno.
So, I could try to find room to mount a fan, or I could bolt these resistors to the inside of the chassis and bolt a heat sink to the outside of the chassis. Or cut a hole in the chassis and mount the heat sink over it and attach the resistors to it somehow.
Hm.
I'm going to have to install a fan, aren't I? Maybe even cut a vent into the cabinet... With the weird layout of the chassis (all the tubes dead center!) I'm not sure how much room I can find for a fan.
Since I'm looking at a couple of watts for the power tube biasing resistors (let's go nuts and say 10W) plus the sag resistors (probably close to another 10W) plus the tubes are hanging down so the heat from the envelopes will be hitting the chassis - how much heat can I expect to be able to pump into the chassis safely? I'm primarily shooting for safety and user comfort here, but component longevity is certainly appealing as well.
This thread has been helpful, as well as confirming my suspicions are somewhat warranted: http://music-electronics-forum.com/t11813/
Anyone have experience with building cathode-biased amps into sealed chassis?
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