I have an old Conrad-Johnson "hi fi" tube amp on the bench with a toasted power supply. It has a really old-school setup - a PNP constant current source feeding a string of twelve 33v Zeners. Two points on this chain are tapped to Darlington NPNs that provide regulated power to the preamp stages. All the transistors have a max VCE of 300v and the raw supply is close to 500.
The problem is, if anything goes wrong you end up with a popped PNP and a dozen toasted Zeners (plus other casualties). This is what has happened - and not for the first time. The PCB pads for all the Zeners are in sad shape (the PCB is an old-school tinned plain board with no coating, etc.)
Is there a better way to provide regulated voltage with modern parts? I've used 900v MOSFETS to do voltage /reduction/, but this is not regulated. Is there a better way to provide a (say) 8 x 33v reference?
The problem is, if anything goes wrong you end up with a popped PNP and a dozen toasted Zeners (plus other casualties). This is what has happened - and not for the first time. The PCB pads for all the Zeners are in sad shape (the PCB is an old-school tinned plain board with no coating, etc.)
Is there a better way to provide regulated voltage with modern parts? I've used 900v MOSFETS to do voltage /reduction/, but this is not regulated. Is there a better way to provide a (say) 8 x 33v reference?
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