If there's anything worse than making a mistake, it's making the same mistake twice.
The micpreamp I'm working on right now has a 12.6V regulated DC supply for the heaters. It's a dual, with three tubes a side, so a total of six tubes, drawing a total of 900mA of current.
I designed a 48V/12.6V board for this thing. But the f*ing 12V regulator I specced (a Micrel 29300-12) can't get over the thermal hump to warm the filaments enough before going into current limiting, even though it's a 3A part. It simply can't fire with 6, 5, or even 4 tubes. If I have only three, it lights right up, and I can then plug in the remaining ones and go on my merry way, so this is definitely the issue. The cold filaments draw waay more current for the few seconds until they heat up enough so the reg is unhappy, and just can't get going.
Those of you with a good memory will remember that I confronted exactly this same issue a couple of years ago with a different build (albeit a different part). But somehow this whole episode was not taken into account when I designed this board.
Anyway, last time I solved this by fitting the voltage regulator with a BJT power transistor pass device helper, using something pretty close to Merlin's recommendation in his power supply book. This worked. But this time, I'd really really like to avoid a redesign.
Soooo... does anybody know of a 12V regulator (preferably three pin) that can, no questions asked, light up a string of six * 150mA @12.6V preamp tubes *from cold* without locking up? Maybe I'm looking for an older device with less sophisticated over-current protection?
For what it's worth, the voltage multiplier / TL783C adjustable regulator on the same board for the 48V phantom supply worked a charm... so that's something.
The micpreamp I'm working on right now has a 12.6V regulated DC supply for the heaters. It's a dual, with three tubes a side, so a total of six tubes, drawing a total of 900mA of current.
I designed a 48V/12.6V board for this thing. But the f*ing 12V regulator I specced (a Micrel 29300-12) can't get over the thermal hump to warm the filaments enough before going into current limiting, even though it's a 3A part. It simply can't fire with 6, 5, or even 4 tubes. If I have only three, it lights right up, and I can then plug in the remaining ones and go on my merry way, so this is definitely the issue. The cold filaments draw waay more current for the few seconds until they heat up enough so the reg is unhappy, and just can't get going.
Those of you with a good memory will remember that I confronted exactly this same issue a couple of years ago with a different build (albeit a different part). But somehow this whole episode was not taken into account when I designed this board.
Anyway, last time I solved this by fitting the voltage regulator with a BJT power transistor pass device helper, using something pretty close to Merlin's recommendation in his power supply book. This worked. But this time, I'd really really like to avoid a redesign.
Soooo... does anybody know of a 12V regulator (preferably three pin) that can, no questions asked, light up a string of six * 150mA @12.6V preamp tubes *from cold* without locking up? Maybe I'm looking for an older device with less sophisticated over-current protection?
For what it's worth, the voltage multiplier / TL783C adjustable regulator on the same board for the 48V phantom supply worked a charm... so that's something.
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