Originally posted by Gtr0
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The physical location of the resistors inside the amp doesn't matter too much. Near the PT, at the end of the filament string, in the middle all work OK. You'd probably want them near each other so temperature differences didn't make them vary, but that is a really, really minor consideration given how little resistors drift with temperature. Wire wound is probably better, but something like metal oxide (MOX) resistors work fine too. As to precision, 5% works pretty well, but 1% resistors are cheap these days, so why not use them.
Yes, just cap off the existing center taps so you don't have them accidentally making contact. Home Depot wire nuts work well for this.
If you're getting custom wound transformers, you're in a whole different league from me. I've never used a custom wound transformer that I didn't personally wind. I just make available trannies work like I want unless I just can't. If you're getting custom wound trannies, do your homework really well on this amp and get your preferred set of conditions down clearly before you order. If you're thinking about custom wound transformers, be really sure before ordering that you've eliminated the other sources of hum in your amp, and then experiment with winding CT versus artificial centertap, Filaments are by far not the only source of hum in an amplifier.
Well, there was a bit of both, but a low hum was the biggest concern. I havent heard the amp for some months now since I tore it down, but I seem to remember it not being 120Hz. If that means anything.
The first few "prototypes" were sort of layed out similar to a SLO, including the non-twisted heater supply (attached image sn_III below) - with my fourth prototype, I have reverted to twisting, like I always have done before... I was trying something new and this was where I meant I could do a major improvement in the lead dress area (see attached image sn_IV). And admittedly, they could even be twisted better... (solid core 18 guage)
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