Originally posted by bob p
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Updated Champ amp heater circuit
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostSorry but you are quite wrong
And to make it clear itīs just not a typo, you repeat same wrong concept in different ways
It seems that there are a lot of people reading this thread who are wearing blinders that cause them only to think about hooking up resistors to the secondary and wiring the junction to ground, which is actually not such a great way to build your amp. The fact that the two types of secondary windings behave similarly in the case where resistors are attached to them has made some people ask if the windings will behave the same way when something else -- like diodes -- are attached to them. Of course that won't be the case. Current will flow through the center tap. There is no equivalent circuit in that case with non-center tapped secondary, so the simplified banter that the two secondary designs are equivalent in the case of hanging resistors on them is based upon flawed logic as it only considers a narrow subset of transformer behavior. This is precisely why center-tapped and non-center-tapped secondaries have to use different rectifier topologies.
The center tap, whether real (copper wire tap in the middle of the winding) or a halfway point between 6.3V wires created with two same value resistors is NOt just a "DC reference" (even that is wrong, itīs actually an AC reference to chassis, no DC there)
It seems evident that some people keep reading this thread with one specific schematic in their mind, and are ignoring other topologies that have been discussed. I didn't think I'd have to draw pictures to make it clear, but I guess I was wrong on that. My bad."Stand back, I'm holding a calculator." - chinrest
"I happen to have an original 1955 Stratocaster! The neck and body have been replaced with top quality Warmoth parts, I upgraded the hardware and put in custom, hand wound pickups. It's fabulous. There's nothing like that vintage tone or owning an original." - Chuck H
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Originally posted by bob p View PostIt seems that there are a lot of people reading this thread who are wearing blinders that cause them only to think about hooking up resistors to the secondary and wiring the junction to ground, which is actually not such a great way to build your amp. The fact that the two types of secondary windings behave similarly in the case where resistors are attached to them has made some people ask if the windings will behave the same way when something else -- like diodes -- are attached to them. Of course that won't be the case. Current will flow through the center tap. There is no equivalent circuit in that case with non-center tapped secondary, so the simplified banter that the two secondary designs are equivalent in the case of hanging resistors on them is based upon flawed logic as it only considers a narrow subset of transformer behavior. This is precisely why center-tapped and non-center-tapped secondaries have to use different rectifier topologies.
Dangling two 100 ohm resistors across any power supply is not rocket science and it quiets most hum. What's the big deal here? I couldn't imagine a 2 page thread about something so simple TBH. Are we really discussing OHMs law and 2 100 ohm resistors here?
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I'm glad that Malcolm pointed out that there's virtue in using 'virtual' in electronics.
I'm glad to see that G1 brought this argument full circle.
Obviously, some people are in the DC offset bias camp; others are just grounding their resistors or pot. I decided to try the resistor grounding idea first and my amp is as quiet as quiet can be (that's an unscientific term) so there's no reason to try anything else. Of course, part of my good luck has to do with shielded grid wires and a very good grounding scheme.
Now, I'm trying to decide if I like the 5V4 rectifier better than the stock 5Y3 and I'm experimenting with a couple of single ended replacement output transformers that I have in stock. For those who have replaced the output transformer on their Champ, VC and/or Bronco amps, what are some successful good choices for an upgraded improvement of this amp's sound?
Thanks all for your input and knowledge,
Bob M.
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