Originally posted by hasserl
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Especially with those old VOX amps, like the AC30s from the 60s.
The stock AC30 PT is made to be run with a 220v to 110v mains voltage and there is no good rotary switch setting for modern line voltages here in the USA.
So, when used here at 120v-126v, the PT and rectifiers made too much B+, greatly under biasing the four EL84 power tubes. I've seen them idling at over 17 watts each in some amps!
In that application, three 9v-12v, 5 watt zeners, with the pre-drilled, solid copper pennies soldered between the leads as a heat sink, made all the difference in the world and still allowed the amp to sound like a fat idling, cathode biased AC30.
The idea of course is to drill two small 1/16" (or less) holes in each penny to be mounted between the diodes and shove the pennies up close to the zener diode's bodies so they can dissipate the heat like cooling fins.
Leaving some of the zener's lead length can actually help cool them too so don't make then leads too short.
Yeah, it looks a little weird but when mounted to a couple small terminal strips near the PT, it is a pretty good remedy and really extends the life of the power tubes without changing the tone of the amp at all.
This works well with all smaller powered amps.
If you need to do this with a high powered amp, I'd use a 50 watt zener diode and maybe or a 2N3055 circuit set up in "pass" as a voltage regulator with a low wattage zener in the base, but still in the grounded center tap lead of the rectifier/PT circuit.
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