Question: Which is better DC Heaters or Elevated heaters??
First, it is a solution, it is done to reduce or eliminate hum from heater/cathode interaction. When my joints hurt, I take Ibuprofen, when they don't hurt, I don't take the pill. Does your amp have heater/cathode hum? It may well not. And in that case it wouldn't matter.
DC heaters? OK, but generally only the first one or two tubes in the chain are fed that way, the rest get plain old AC. Of course there are exceptions to anything. By limiting it to just a couple, you need not make a high current DC supply. You could do something like Peavey did in the 5150 and run all the 12AX7s on 12v and in series. But you'd need a 36v supply or something, which your transformer would not welcome.
Elevate? The good news is the elevation doesn't have to provide any current, it is just a voltage reference, so you can just as easily elevate one or all of them. That is as simle as movinbg your heater center tap to the positive voltage instead of ground,
The thing about either way is that it is mainly those first two stages, where the signal is not yet strong, and they are more sensitive to hum. SO elevating or DC-ing the power tubes or phase splitter or whateveer, will be less effective.
Now, if you are not aware, you need to keep in mind that hum can come from a hundred places, and EACH source has its own cure. HUM IS NOT GENERIC. In other words if you have heater/cathode hum, adding filter caps to th B+ will do nothing for it. Likewise, weak filters on the B+ won't be helped in th slightest by elevating heaters. That is why when someone asks me about hum, the first thing I ask is this: is it 60Hz or 120Hz hum. 120Hz implies power supply ripple, while 60Hz implies things like heaters or signal grounds. Grounds matter. You can have a five inch hunk of wire from part of the circuit to ground, and it matters which end of that wire you connect other grounds to. I solved a hum problem in an old AMpeg once by moving a ground connection three inches.
So which is better? Either method works. A method works or it doesn't, simple as that, if you could do both and switch between them, I doubt you'd hear any difference. What makes one way better than the other is which one fits your situation best. How convenient is it to install whatever wiring is needed?
Just my opinion.
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