Gunner wrote:Thanks! I get the point.
But there must still be an increased risk for frying the PT with the fuse after first filter caps, right?
Maybe. Typically if you short a filter cap or a rectifier diode the PT will draw more than enough current to take out the mains fuse.
Gunner wrote:
Hm, strange. In the 1959 HW scheme the fuse is actually placed between the rectifier bridge and first filter caps. That amp has the same arrangement with CT to the point between the first filter caps, no bleeding res and so on, similar to the old stock 1959 scheme. Got any explanation to that too?
/G
"Designer's oversight" is pretty much what that boils down to. The positive rectifiers and the top filter cap may be protected, but the negative diodes and bottom filter cap have to rely on the Mains Fuse to get taken out.
Just because Marshall did it doesn't mean it's right. God knows they made plenty of mistakes on their earlier amps (such as running 4 x EL34s on a 1.7K plate-plate load on a 500V B+, when the proper load should've been 2.5K for that voltage).
Typically if you want to fuse it prior to the first filter caps and do it CORRECTLY you must remove the CT connection, then add bleeder resistors to balance the cap voltage. You can then place the fuse prior to the first filter caps.