Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
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Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
I got a power transformer that measures about 375 V on each of the secondary wires. There is no center tap tho'
Do I need a center tap if I want to go with a tube rectifier or is diode rectification my only option?
Do I need a center tap if I want to go with a tube rectifier or is diode rectification my only option?
Last edited by tribi9 on Fri Jun 25, 2010 7:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
http://www.freewebs.com/valvewizard/bridge.html
You can do a hybrid bridge w/ 2 silicon diodes and a tube rectifier, but you can get the same effect w/ 4 SS diodes and a sag resistor.
Matt.
You can do a hybrid bridge w/ 2 silicon diodes and a tube rectifier, but you can get the same effect w/ 4 SS diodes and a sag resistor.
Matt.
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
Thank you for the link Matt.
What voltage difference do you get from AC in to DC out? Is it volt by volt the conversion? What VDC should I be expecting with a 375 VAC on the secondary?
What voltage difference do you get from AC in to DC out? Is it volt by volt the conversion? What VDC should I be expecting with a 375 VAC on the secondary?
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
A bridge rectifier w/ a cap input load will give you a DC of approximately 1.4 * VAC. In this case, that's 375 * 1.4 or 525VDC. Once you have a load on it, it'll drop some. In any case, that's a pretty high B+. (a couple of EL34's
)
If you wanted to switch to a choke input load, it'd drop to about 330VDC with lots more current available, but that would require a pretty hefty choke.
http://www.hammondmfg.com/pdf/5c007.pdf
Matt
If you wanted to switch to a choke input load, it'd drop to about 330VDC with lots more current available, but that would require a pretty hefty choke.
http://www.hammondmfg.com/pdf/5c007.pdf
Matt
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
So what size choke would I need to get the DC at 420V?
Could I not use a resistor before or after the rectifier to bring the B+ down?
Could I not use a resistor before or after the rectifier to bring the B+ down?
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
First, if the 375 is measured w/ the tranny totally unloaded, it'll drop significantly when there's any load on it, probably closer to 325. (that's just a guess; others here will have a more accurate guesstimate) . That'll give you about 450VDC rectified (cap input load), which is pretty close to what you want.
Again, that's just a guess, but should be pretty close. If you use a hybrid SS/tube bridge w/ a GZ34, it'll give you about 420VDC, depending on load. A 100-ohm sag resistor would give about the same voltage.
What type of amp are you going to use this for?
Matt.
Again, that's just a guess, but should be pretty close. If you use a hybrid SS/tube bridge w/ a GZ34, it'll give you about 420VDC, depending on load. A 100-ohm sag resistor would give about the same voltage.
What type of amp are you going to use this for?
Matt.
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
I have a bunch of spare parts, enough to build an AA1164 so I'm hoping to use this. Yhank you Matt.
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
In the example below...
See the secondary wire that connects to pin 4 on the 5U4GB and then goes to the 100K resistor and then a diode. Is the diode there acting as a rectifier?
What is the need for that couldn't that just run off the other rectifier filament (Pin 2) eliminating the need for the diode there?
http://www.el34world.com/charts/Schemat ... AA1164.pdf
See the secondary wire that connects to pin 4 on the 5U4GB and then goes to the 100K resistor and then a diode. Is the diode there acting as a rectifier?
What is the need for that couldn't that just run off the other rectifier filament (Pin 2) eliminating the need for the diode there?
http://www.el34world.com/charts/Schemat ... AA1164.pdf
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
You do need a 5V winding for a tube rectifier tho'. Something your PT may not have if the High Tension winding doesn't have a CT. So you might need a 2nd (5V) PT
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
My PT does have a 5 V winding tubeswell.
What about the question on the schematic. Can anyone help me with that.
What about the question on the schematic. Can anyone help me with that.
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
That 100k + diode + other-stuff is the bias supply. The diode is backwards to create the necessarily negative bias voltage. With a bridge rectifier, the bias supply can't be connected that way, but must run through a cap. Some of the later marshalls have the same bias-supply setup. If you can't find one, I'll get one for you later today when I get back.
Do you have the full specs on the tranny, or what it was powering in a previous life? Power tube type & number, etc? (or a manufacturer/model #)
Matt
Do you have the full specs on the tranny, or what it was powering in a previous life? Power tube type & number, etc? (or a manufacturer/model #)
Matt
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
Marshall JCM900 and others use a similar PT. I recently used one and had no problems with their bias circuit.
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Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
Recent relevant discussion with several circuit examples here.
https://tubeamparchive.com/viewtopic.php?t=11613
https://tubeamparchive.com/viewtopic.php?t=11613
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
Yes the 'backwards' single diode is a 1/2-wave negative rectifier. You will note that the electrolytic filter cap for the bias is also installed +ve end pointing to ground. This smooths the 1/2-wave -ve rectified AC voltage to a sufficiently stable -ve DC voltage. The -ve bias voltage is supplied to the 6V6 grids via the 2 x 220k grid load resistors, via the trem intensity pot.
The voltage divider in the stock BFPR is comprised of the 100k and the 22k. In other amps with a secondary 50VAC bias tap, the voltage divider is nowhere near as low, but in the BFPR the bias supply is being tapped off on of the (340VAC) HT winding ends so it needs to be low.
You can't run the bias supply off one of the 5VAC rectifier windings, because you need about -34VDC for the bias supply and in practical terms you'll wont get that with a 5VAC source
The voltage divider in the stock BFPR is comprised of the 100k and the 22k. In other amps with a secondary 50VAC bias tap, the voltage divider is nowhere near as low, but in the BFPR the bias supply is being tapped off on of the (340VAC) HT winding ends so it needs to be low.
You can't run the bias supply off one of the 5VAC rectifier windings, because you need about -34VDC for the bias supply and in practical terms you'll wont get that with a 5VAC source
Re: Help me troubleshoot my in progress Princeton build.
Thank you tubeswell. See what confuses me a bit is that Pin 2 and 8 are both filaments on a 5U4GB. Pin 8+ supplies 420VDC to the OT. So wouldn't Pin 2 which is tied to Pin 8 be able to supply 420V minus whatever resistor+cap combo needed to get the appropiate rectified voltage needed to the grid eliminating the need for that diode?
How could I wire the bias cap if I decide to build this amp using diode rectification and this PT with no center tap. The only way I know how to do it is with a CT on the PT.
Morcey the PT used to power 2 6L6G's. It was from a movie projector amp.
It has 5 and a 6.3 V taps each of the secondary measured 375V. That's all I know.
How could I wire the bias cap if I decide to build this amp using diode rectification and this PT with no center tap. The only way I know how to do it is with a CT on the PT.
Morcey the PT used to power 2 6L6G's. It was from a movie projector amp.
It has 5 and a 6.3 V taps each of the secondary measured 375V. That's all I know.