That is what I am saying, yes.
I have trained many technicians over the years. And I see certain patterns of behavior over and over. One involves scopes. techs not experienced with scopes develop the need/desire to get a waveform on the screen, no matter WHAT. I made up the term "trace chasing" for it, maybe someone has a better term. A guy connects his scope to some point, let us say the input stage B+, and sees a flat line, so he turns the scope vertical up and up until lo and behold, a waveform emerges. it might be a millivolt of ripple, hell it might be the local AM radio station a half mile away. But he got SOMETHING on the screen and so felt like he got somewhere.
I am not accusing you or anyone in this discussion of doing that, but it illustrates my point. If you look hard enough you will find something. I set up my meter or my scope to see a reasonable likeness of the node I am researching. If the DC appears calm, then I accept that it is, rather than go trace chasing to find a problem, any problem.
You want numbers? Go find an amp you think sounds OK and measure its ripple.
Let me put it another way. What is the amount of salt to put on your steak so it tastes best? I want to know in grams or milligrams and maybe break it down into salt grains per square centimeter. No? How about taste the steak, and shake a little salt on there if it is needed. We may never know how many milligrams of salt taste best, nor care. Deciding how much ripple to have on the lower B+ nodes is not something I decide with a meter. If I plug in an amp on my bench and it sounds OK, I am not going to even measure its ripple. If my first stages are hummy, chances are ripple is not the cause anyway. Unless those filter/decoupling caps are absent completely, if i still have ripple down at the end of the B+ chain, I am going to have TONS of it farther upstream to occupy myself. If I have a dried up cap in the end B+ node, it might supposed to be 20uf and it is acting like a 5uf, I am more likely to have instability in the amp than ripple problems. I am going nuts trying to find one now, but there were some ancient amps that used just a 0.1uf cap as a decoupler for the input stages.
I have trained many technicians over the years. And I see certain patterns of behavior over and over. One involves scopes. techs not experienced with scopes develop the need/desire to get a waveform on the screen, no matter WHAT. I made up the term "trace chasing" for it, maybe someone has a better term. A guy connects his scope to some point, let us say the input stage B+, and sees a flat line, so he turns the scope vertical up and up until lo and behold, a waveform emerges. it might be a millivolt of ripple, hell it might be the local AM radio station a half mile away. But he got SOMETHING on the screen and so felt like he got somewhere.
I am not accusing you or anyone in this discussion of doing that, but it illustrates my point. If you look hard enough you will find something. I set up my meter or my scope to see a reasonable likeness of the node I am researching. If the DC appears calm, then I accept that it is, rather than go trace chasing to find a problem, any problem.
You want numbers? Go find an amp you think sounds OK and measure its ripple.
Let me put it another way. What is the amount of salt to put on your steak so it tastes best? I want to know in grams or milligrams and maybe break it down into salt grains per square centimeter. No? How about taste the steak, and shake a little salt on there if it is needed. We may never know how many milligrams of salt taste best, nor care. Deciding how much ripple to have on the lower B+ nodes is not something I decide with a meter. If I plug in an amp on my bench and it sounds OK, I am not going to even measure its ripple. If my first stages are hummy, chances are ripple is not the cause anyway. Unless those filter/decoupling caps are absent completely, if i still have ripple down at the end of the B+ chain, I am going to have TONS of it farther upstream to occupy myself. If I have a dried up cap in the end B+ node, it might supposed to be 20uf and it is acting like a 5uf, I am more likely to have instability in the amp than ripple problems. I am going nuts trying to find one now, but there were some ancient amps that used just a 0.1uf cap as a decoupler for the input stages.
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