I've been building attenuators again, and have some questions.
Some of you may remember my Ampwell House I built last year with a variable L-Pad from Parts Express. I've now built a similar one with a dual ganged 100 watt 8 ohm L-Pads wired in parallel to get 4 ohms. The parallel wiring changes the taper a little but that's ok. The attenuator sounds pretty good, and because of the dual pots it will handle more power. Not sure how much tho.
I also built a static attenuator with sand cast power resistors from Ted Weber. Each section has two 50 watt resistors and it's a 4 ohm impedance. I did a thread over at TGP about it, you might get a chuckle regarding the enclosure I used.
First question: The power handling capability is hard to determine. I drove the variable L-Pad with a dimed Bandmaster for about twenty minutes, and the pots were hot, meaning, put your finger on it, and two or three seconds pull it away. A buddy brought his Vicky 30 watt tweed Bandmaster over and we drove it hard with that, and it got real warm but not too bad.
The static attenuator did the same thing with a dimed Pro Reverb. With a fan on each of them they ran a bit cooler.
So, how hot is too hot? How do I tell? Do the Calvin and Hobbes thing and keep driving them with bigger and bigger amps until something burns up? I know it's about heat dissipation and if I go by the wattage ratings the one should be rated at 200 watts and the other at 100 watts, but that don't seem likely in real world testing.
Second question: I've seen commercial attenuators that have fans powered by the speaker voltage coming from the amp. How do they do that? Use AC fans or rectifiy it to DC?
Thanks all,
regis
Some of you may remember my Ampwell House I built last year with a variable L-Pad from Parts Express. I've now built a similar one with a dual ganged 100 watt 8 ohm L-Pads wired in parallel to get 4 ohms. The parallel wiring changes the taper a little but that's ok. The attenuator sounds pretty good, and because of the dual pots it will handle more power. Not sure how much tho.
I also built a static attenuator with sand cast power resistors from Ted Weber. Each section has two 50 watt resistors and it's a 4 ohm impedance. I did a thread over at TGP about it, you might get a chuckle regarding the enclosure I used.
First question: The power handling capability is hard to determine. I drove the variable L-Pad with a dimed Bandmaster for about twenty minutes, and the pots were hot, meaning, put your finger on it, and two or three seconds pull it away. A buddy brought his Vicky 30 watt tweed Bandmaster over and we drove it hard with that, and it got real warm but not too bad.
The static attenuator did the same thing with a dimed Pro Reverb. With a fan on each of them they ran a bit cooler.
So, how hot is too hot? How do I tell? Do the Calvin and Hobbes thing and keep driving them with bigger and bigger amps until something burns up? I know it's about heat dissipation and if I go by the wattage ratings the one should be rated at 200 watts and the other at 100 watts, but that don't seem likely in real world testing.
Second question: I've seen commercial attenuators that have fans powered by the speaker voltage coming from the amp. How do they do that? Use AC fans or rectifiy it to DC?
Thanks all,
regis
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