Hey folks,
I did see another post regarding a dude who bought on of these and someone had modified the power supply to accept a solid state rectifier. My experience with the one I have is that even with the original 5AR4 rectifier, the B+ on the filter caps exceeds & almost equals the rating of the caps at 525Vdc. I assume this is because even with the original rated 117Vac, the B+ was already fairly high to begin with so with the solid state rectifiers it definitly exceeds the rated 525Vdc on the filter caps.
Anyway, this customer was using a solid state replacement for the 5AR4 without any mods to the filters, and the filter cap bulged out & spewed its guts under the chassis.
Long story longer, I did the similar thing the previous 200s text did, but from the Fender amps, I knew about the dropping resistors to even out the voltage to each cap that is in series.
NOW, the issue I'm having is that the 5AR4 is intermittently arcing inside when taken off of stby. 5AR4 is the rect the amp originally called for). The spec for the 5AR4 as far as input filter is 60uf max. The equivalent value of the input filter cap is 40uf, so I'm well below that (from 2ea 82uf in series with 220K dropping resistors). I also did the same with the 2nd B+ node filters with equivalent value at 22uf. The line current draw is not excessive.
If I use a 5U4 rect, there is no issue, except the increased sag owing to its specs.
I've already told this customer that given the need to readjust the idle wattage bias on the power tubes for the tube rectifier vs the solid state use, that he needs to decide which one he wants to use & I'll set the amp up for that. I doubt he'd be interested in having me add a switch to the bias ckt to change from tube to SS rectifier and would probably forget to switch it anyway!
Anyone have any ideas as to why this arrangement would cause the 5AR4 rect to behave this way? I calculate the extra current draw from the divider resistors is negligable.
I'm kinda stumped here.
Thanx, glen
I did see another post regarding a dude who bought on of these and someone had modified the power supply to accept a solid state rectifier. My experience with the one I have is that even with the original 5AR4 rectifier, the B+ on the filter caps exceeds & almost equals the rating of the caps at 525Vdc. I assume this is because even with the original rated 117Vac, the B+ was already fairly high to begin with so with the solid state rectifiers it definitly exceeds the rated 525Vdc on the filter caps.
Anyway, this customer was using a solid state replacement for the 5AR4 without any mods to the filters, and the filter cap bulged out & spewed its guts under the chassis.
Long story longer, I did the similar thing the previous 200s text did, but from the Fender amps, I knew about the dropping resistors to even out the voltage to each cap that is in series.
NOW, the issue I'm having is that the 5AR4 is intermittently arcing inside when taken off of stby. 5AR4 is the rect the amp originally called for). The spec for the 5AR4 as far as input filter is 60uf max. The equivalent value of the input filter cap is 40uf, so I'm well below that (from 2ea 82uf in series with 220K dropping resistors). I also did the same with the 2nd B+ node filters with equivalent value at 22uf. The line current draw is not excessive.
If I use a 5U4 rect, there is no issue, except the increased sag owing to its specs.
I've already told this customer that given the need to readjust the idle wattage bias on the power tubes for the tube rectifier vs the solid state use, that he needs to decide which one he wants to use & I'll set the amp up for that. I doubt he'd be interested in having me add a switch to the bias ckt to change from tube to SS rectifier and would probably forget to switch it anyway!
Anyone have any ideas as to why this arrangement would cause the 5AR4 rect to behave this way? I calculate the extra current draw from the divider resistors is negligable.
I'm kinda stumped here.
Thanx, glen
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