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OT - A question for the valve experts.
I collect old test gear as a hobby, and like to have it working too. I
recently bought a 110v valve sig gen in very nice condition and it works fine off a 110 supply. Looking inside - as you do - I noticed that the transformer primary was two windings in parallel. This, of course, is common these days - parallel operation for 115 volts and series for 230. So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? -- *All men are idiots, and I married their King. Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
Dave Plowman wrote:
I collect old test gear as a hobby, and like to have it working too. I recently bought a 110v valve sig gen in very nice condition and it works fine off a 110 supply. Looking inside - as you do - I noticed that the transformer primary was two windings in parallel. This, of course, is common these days - parallel operation for 115 volts and series for 230. So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? Just a bit more that +10%, I suspect it could shorten the life of the valves a bit. How many valves and what are they, 500ma is less that two ECC83's (for example) would take, it may be that under actual use the voltage would be lower that that. HT will I guess be a bit high as well, but 10% shouldnt make that much of a difference. Other option (as I am sure you know) would be to measure the primary current and add a small dropper resistor. Having wrote all that, I am tempted to say, no it probably won't matter. -- Nick |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
Dave Plowman wrote:
I collect old test gear as a hobby, and like to have it working too. I recently bought a 110v valve sig gen in very nice condition and it works fine off a 110 supply. Looking inside - as you do - I noticed that the transformer primary was two windings in parallel. This, of course, is common these days - parallel operation for 115 volts and series for 230. So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? Just a bit more that +10%, I suspect it could shorten the life of the valves a bit. How many valves and what are they, 500ma is less that two ECC83's (for example) would take, it may be that under actual use the voltage would be lower that that. HT will I guess be a bit high as well, but 10% shouldnt make that much of a difference. Other option (as I am sure you know) would be to measure the primary current and add a small dropper resistor. Having wrote all that, I am tempted to say, no it probably won't matter. -- Nick |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
Not a valve expert, but i would think:
a) each heater would draw more current. b) valve reliability would go down. c) valve transfer characteristics would change slightly. By how much and if it matters significantly, i dont know, but it's probably valve type dependent. Why 6.3volts anyway? |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
Not a valve expert, but i would think:
a) each heater would draw more current. b) valve reliability would go down. c) valve transfer characteristics would change slightly. By how much and if it matters significantly, i dont know, but it's probably valve type dependent. Why 6.3volts anyway? |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
Dave Plowman wrote:
So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? Never been in that situation, but... http://www.burdaleclose.freeserve.co.uk/new_page_33.htm ....says... --------------------- Filament and heater voltages should generally be maintained within ± 7 per cent of the rated values. The heater current of valves connected in series should be maintained within ± 5 per cent of the rated values. Thoriated-tungsten* and oxide-coated filaments should be maintained within closer tolerances than the above figures: 5 Per cent voltage fluctuations are permissible, but permanent deviation from rated value will reduce valve life. Directly heated and indirectly heated valves having similar filament current ratings should not be connected in series. --------------------- And a couple of comments from... http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread/t-13340.html --------------------- Mullard quote 5% tolerance on heater voltages, but mains voltage varies, so AC heaters need to be set as closely as possible (and ideally measured with a true RMS meter). Regulated DC supplies can be set to precisely the correct voltage, so it seems foolish not to do so... --------------------- I recall reading a long time ago that every %10 high your filaments are, your tube life get's cut in half. --------------------- If you're getting bang on 7V, then that's a shade over 11%, which might be a bit high if the above are anything to go by. I suspect that the same will happen to the HT lines, and that could result in the biasing of the valves being slightly out - could be an issue if the unit is supposed to do precise measurements. You could risk it, but maybe a 240-110 step down transformer is the safest option. -- Wally www.art-gallery.myby.co.uk Latest work: The Langlois Bridge (after Van Gogh) |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
Dave Plowman wrote:
So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? Never been in that situation, but... http://www.burdaleclose.freeserve.co.uk/new_page_33.htm ....says... --------------------- Filament and heater voltages should generally be maintained within ± 7 per cent of the rated values. The heater current of valves connected in series should be maintained within ± 5 per cent of the rated values. Thoriated-tungsten* and oxide-coated filaments should be maintained within closer tolerances than the above figures: 5 Per cent voltage fluctuations are permissible, but permanent deviation from rated value will reduce valve life. Directly heated and indirectly heated valves having similar filament current ratings should not be connected in series. --------------------- And a couple of comments from... http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread/t-13340.html --------------------- Mullard quote 5% tolerance on heater voltages, but mains voltage varies, so AC heaters need to be set as closely as possible (and ideally measured with a true RMS meter). Regulated DC supplies can be set to precisely the correct voltage, so it seems foolish not to do so... --------------------- I recall reading a long time ago that every %10 high your filaments are, your tube life get's cut in half. --------------------- If you're getting bang on 7V, then that's a shade over 11%, which might be a bit high if the above are anything to go by. I suspect that the same will happen to the HT lines, and that could result in the biasing of the valves being slightly out - could be an issue if the unit is supposed to do precise measurements. You could risk it, but maybe a 240-110 step down transformer is the safest option. -- Wally www.art-gallery.myby.co.uk Latest work: The Langlois Bridge (after Van Gogh) |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
On Sat, 13 Dec 2003 14:14:03 +0000, Dave Plowman wrote:
I collect old test gear as a hobby, and like to have it working too. I recently bought a 110v valve sig gen in very nice condition and it works fine off a 110 supply. Looking inside - as you do - I noticed that the transformer primary was two windings in parallel. This, of course, is common these days - parallel operation for 115 volts and series for 230. So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? You should get away with it as this sort of equipment isn't usually left on for days on end - at this time of its life, anyway! If it worries you, connect the AC terminals of a small bridge rectifier in series with the heater winding. That should drop enough volts to keep things happy. (ignore the + & - terminals). -- Mick http://www.nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini information Also at http://www.mixtel.co.uk where the collection started. Currently deserting M$ for linux... :-) |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
On Sat, 13 Dec 2003 14:14:03 +0000, Dave Plowman wrote:
I collect old test gear as a hobby, and like to have it working too. I recently bought a 110v valve sig gen in very nice condition and it works fine off a 110 supply. Looking inside - as you do - I noticed that the transformer primary was two windings in parallel. This, of course, is common these days - parallel operation for 115 volts and series for 230. So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? You should get away with it as this sort of equipment isn't usually left on for days on end - at this time of its life, anyway! If it worries you, connect the AC terminals of a small bridge rectifier in series with the heater winding. That should drop enough volts to keep things happy. (ignore the + & - terminals). -- Mick http://www.nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini information Also at http://www.mixtel.co.uk where the collection started. Currently deserting M$ for linux... :-) |
OT - A question for the valve experts.
"Nick Gorham" wrote in message ... Dave Plowman wrote: I collect old test gear as a hobby, and like to have it working too. I recently bought a 110v valve sig gen in very nice condition and it works fine off a 110 supply. Looking inside - as you do - I noticed that the transformer primary was two windings in parallel. This, of course, is common these days - parallel operation for 115 volts and series for 230. So I removed the transformer, and series the windings. On UK mains, under 500mA load, the heater volts are 7 volts rather than 6.3 which makes sense if the windings are 110 volt. Will this matter? Just a bit more that +10%, I suspect it could shorten the life of the valves a bit. How many valves and what are they, 500ma is less that two ECC83's (for example) would take, it may be that under actual use the voltage would be lower that that. HT will I guess be a bit high as well, but 10% shouldnt make that much of a difference. Other option (as I am sure you know) would be to measure the primary current and add a small dropper resistor. Having wrote all that, I am tempted to say, no it probably won't matter. Hmmm, I wouldn't worry about +10% (max) heater voltage on an amp running summat cheap/plentiful/tough like a bunch of 5881s (or similar) but I personally wouldn't knock a matched pair of WE300Bs about with that much extra voltage. Test Gear though? - No, I'd sooner see that figure yanked back a lot nearer to the line, like you say..... |
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