In vintage tube amps with no negative feedback from the output transformer secondary, you still usually see one side of the secondary grounded to the chassis.
I think I remember at some point reading about why it was important to tie one side of the secondary to ground even when you don't need a ground reference for NFB, but I can't remember the reasoning. Does it have to do with the potential for RF pickup by the speaker wires? And sometimes the speaker frame itself is connected to the ground wire.
What happens if you don't connect the OPT secondary to circuit or chassis ground? And when grounding the secondary where should the connection go? Direct to chassis? To the main ground buss?
I think I remember at some point reading about why it was important to tie one side of the secondary to ground even when you don't need a ground reference for NFB, but I can't remember the reasoning. Does it have to do with the potential for RF pickup by the speaker wires? And sometimes the speaker frame itself is connected to the ground wire.
What happens if you don't connect the OPT secondary to circuit or chassis ground? And when grounding the secondary where should the connection go? Direct to chassis? To the main ground buss?
Comment