I also vote for using headphones to orient transformers
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PT and OT transformer core orientation
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Originally posted by nsubulysses View Post
The other volume, about tube amp theory, is probably one of the best tube amp texts you can buy.
Because of this particular book I started building my own mixed aluminum + brass chassis.
I needed good electrical conductivity for my star grounding with as little as possible magnetic conductivity.
This is what I came up with:
The mid section is 2 to 3mm thick brass or mixed aluminum with a thin sheet of brass under it (note on side photo below). (Pure 3mm brass is too expensive so for my experiments I used aluminum + brass.) I could then easily solder electrical terminals to the brass layer that faced the circuit.
The structure was made out of L shaped aluminum profiles (aluminum chassis assembly idea copied straight out of Morgan Jones book) as such:
My transformers would sit on the brass or aluminum middle section.
Zero magnetic noise. (And electrical conductivity for proper grounding don't get much better than brass.)
Out of respect for square law m-field, I always set the transformer laminations at 90 degrees regardless of how far:
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostCopper and aluminum are better electrical conductors than brass.
The above amplifier is dead quiet which is what I wanted to achieve.
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostCopper and aluminum are better electrical conductors than brass.
Last edited by catalin gramada; 08-24-2019, 09:59 PM."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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Originally posted by catalin gramada View PostSometimes I used this kind of brass pipe (3 mm dia.) for long grounding bus (meant double surface for same section). I did not notice any diferences in term of noise in respect with cooper bus wire. One remark think should be done regards physical contacts between cooper/brass and aluminium as both tends to protect by auto oxidation and in contact each with another develop thin layer of oxide which maximise residual resistance.
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The main point here is that the transformer will always induce some tiny current on a steel chassis but not on aluminum or brass.
The tiny electrical conductivity differences between metals in chassis-distances won't generate perceivable voltages with signal-level currents. The metal conductivity was picked from my reply but it was definitely not the main point. Brass is acceptable, that's the point.
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I did not notice any diferences in term of noise in respect with cooper bus wire. One remark think should be done regards physical contacts between cooper/brass and aluminium as both tends to protect by auto oxidation and in contact each with another develop thin layer of oxide which maximise residual resistance.
Only aluminum is known for noteworthy auto-oxidation, that's why it isn't easy to solder.
Especially if you have a ground loop also ground path inductivity matters.- Own Opinions Only -
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