Just came across a schematic that has the heaters for the preamp tubes wired up using DC, and the power tubes using AC.
I can see why you'd want to do this, to keep that AC hum away from your preamp tubes. And for the power tubes, since the AC hum will affect these much less you just use AC.
I can see why you'd not want to do this: because of the extra circuitry needed to provide the correct DC voltage. Why bother when AC works just fine if you use a modicum of care with your build?
Outside of what I've mentioned, is there any compelling reason to use DC for the preamp heaters? And why would they go to the trouble of using AC for the power tube heaters? In other words, if you're gonna convert to DC why not just use it everywhere? Seems like an interesting way to design the amp. Any ideas what the benefit is?
I can see why you'd want to do this, to keep that AC hum away from your preamp tubes. And for the power tubes, since the AC hum will affect these much less you just use AC.
I can see why you'd not want to do this: because of the extra circuitry needed to provide the correct DC voltage. Why bother when AC works just fine if you use a modicum of care with your build?
Outside of what I've mentioned, is there any compelling reason to use DC for the preamp heaters? And why would they go to the trouble of using AC for the power tube heaters? In other words, if you're gonna convert to DC why not just use it everywhere? Seems like an interesting way to design the amp. Any ideas what the benefit is?
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