Has anyone come up with a way to modulate the voltage supply to the preamp in a semi-automated manner via the audio signal? Obviously if the preamp is drawing it's B+ supply down the chain from the power amp supply, the supply voltage is going to bounce up and down as is typical to most amps as the power amp draws current. However, how about in a situation where the preamp is supplied from a different or very stiff source? The current draw of the preamp (LTPI through input stages) is at @ 8mA total, and doesn't really change one bit from idle to full bore with a signal injected. This is a later 60s plexi preamp, so it has a lot of capacitance which further keeps it very stiff. I may try to lower the capacitance somewhat, maybe to JTM45 level or even lower, but it may let some increased hum back in which I don't really want and frankly I doubt it will really affect the sag - or I should say, lack of sag, as the current draw just for the preamp really is not changing. What I need to do is figure out a way to cause the preamp supply to drop 20-30 V or so when the amp is being driven to emulate what will happen in a typical plexi circuit when the power amp gets cooking and the B+ sags because right now it is not sagging and the preamp is just too stiff. I suppose it could be done using a 2W pot as a variable resistor, maybe 10K or so, but this seems to typically be frowned upon and it would have to be adjusted manually. So I was thinking is there some way to use the variable audio signal as a "guide" and implement some way of causing the B+ to increase/decrease while tracking the audio signal? Or some other method? I guess I'm looking for something like one of the popular VVR controls, but tied only into the preamp supply and somehow running in an self-adjusting manner. Is this making sense?
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