Check that out, the mains filter caps look smaller than the screens..

Also check the OT..

Moderators: VelvetGeorge, RACKSYSTEMS
This is the way I think it works:motrock wrote:I can confirm that Dave drops the voltage to the whole amp. Thats why I had the Variac inside my Variplex removed and a regular power cord installed. That way I could plug directly in to a Variac and lower the WHOLE amp. Dave did stress that the heater voltage being dropped was part of the equation!
Yes, it would probably be more like a 160vac tap to simulate lowering it from 120vac to 90vac; but, I though it might be simpler for folks to follow if I kept both voltage delta at 30v.julkke wrote:Hmm, I think it should change to a higher primary tap than 150v for that much of a voltage drop? No? I might try the zener trick to knock my b+ down a bit and experiment how it browns out the sound.
Thats the voltage I'd like to get to. I'm currently on 470v. Wonder if dropping the voltage 60-70v with zeners would be a problem?vh junkie wrote:Yes, it would probably be more like a 160vac tap to simulate lowering it from 120vac to 90vac; but, I though it might be simpler for folks to follow if I kept both voltage delta at 30v.julkke wrote:Hmm, I think it should change to a higher primary tap than 150v for that much of a voltage drop? No? I might try the zener trick to knock my b+ down a bit and experiment how it browns out the sound.
Personally, I think it sound best if the HIv ends up in the 400v to 410v range.
So the higher vac primary drops the the voltage , as well as the heaters???i wonder how the extra primary 150vac effects the nature of the power transformer such as sag ??vh junkie, you are the man..vh junkie wrote:This is the way I think it works:motrock wrote:I can confirm that Dave drops the voltage to the whole amp. Thats why I had the Variac inside my Variplex removed and a regular power cord installed. That way I could plug directly in to a Variac and lower the WHOLE amp. Dave did stress that the heater voltage being dropped was part of the equation!
There are additional taps on the primary of the PT
120vac, 150vac, (if this can be wired for overseas use, more taps would be required)
For 120vac(North America)
Normal mode: The power switch connects the 120vac input to the 120vac primary tap, yielding the HIv DC (about 475v?)
Brown mode: The power switch connects the 120vac input to the 150vac primary tap, yielding the LOv DC (about 390v?)
This let the Brown mode deliver the same voltage as if there was a variac turned down to 90vac.
The heater voltage is lowered in brown mode naturally (no additional circuitry required)
The bias voltage also behaves naturally, the lower bias (less negative) voltage output by the PT makes the bias hotter.
All that remains is to install separate pots for adjusting the bias voltage in each mode.
This is accomplished by switching the bias ground(above where it says HI on the board) thru the third pole (common) of the power switch and looping the switched outputs back to each of the bias pots on the board. Pretty clever!
Sag? Well that would depend... if these were designed to run overseas, the taps would have to run up to 300vac+(for a 240vac input)... there is also the issue of overseas current running at 50hz instead of 60hz... I am not a PT expert, but from what I gather the PT needs to be built sturdier to support the 240v/50hz scenario, so sag would be limited.bmf5150 wrote: So the higher vac primary drops the the voltage , as well as the heaters???i wonder how the extra primary 150vac effects the nature of the power transformer such as sag ??
I have often bee curious about the impact 50hz vs 60hz has on tone. Meaning when an amp is built for one, say 50hz, does running it with 60hz have any tonal impacts or vice versa?vh junkie wrote:Sag? Well that would depend... if these were designed to run overseas, the taps would have to run up to 300vac+(for a 240vac input)... there is also the issue of overseas current running at 50hz instead of 60hz... I am not a PT expert, but from what I gather the PT needs to be built sturdier to support the 240v/50hz scenario, so sag would be limited.bmf5150 wrote: So the higher vac primary drops the the voltage , as well as the heaters???i wonder how the extra primary 150vac effects the nature of the power transformer such as sag ??
The lower voltage at the PT input could be achieved by other means:
1) A built in variac hooked of the power switch (big and heavy)
2) A smaller (3x3x4?) inch tapped autotransformer.
Both of these would be hard to mount on the chassis itself, so unless someone has seen one of these, I would go with the tapped primary PT.
Yep nice read indeed. I might do a recap with mallories now!bmf5150 wrote:Good read on John suhr and his amp
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