![]() |
One for the valvies 2/2....
Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Nick Gorham wrote: Fleetie wrote: Mind you, if there's feedback and so on happening round it all, goodness only knows. Its not a feedback issue, just inductors at play. Not quite. The o/p transformer is a pair of *coupled* inductors, and there may be feedback from either/both sides. This may then control the voltage gain and prevent problems. Depends upon the details of the design. Removing the speaker load may drop the current levels, but this does not *guarantee* that the plate swing will rise to a dangerous level. There is a risk of, this, though. So you must assume it possible with an 'unknown' design. I've certainly seen the classic output stage burnout occur where feedback *was* taken from the secondary side - so I wouldn't advise that as an indicator of it being safe to hot swap. Graham |
One for the valvies 2/2....
In article , Pooh Bear
wrote: Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Nick Gorham wrote: Its not a feedback issue, just inductors at play. Not quite. The o/p transformer is a pair of *coupled* inductors, and there may be feedback from either/both sides. This may then control the voltage gain and prevent problems. Depends upon the details of the design. Removing the speaker load may drop the current levels, but this does not *guarantee* that the plate swing will rise to a dangerous level. There is a risk of, this, though. So you must assume it possible with an 'unknown' design. I've certainly seen the classic output stage burnout occur where feedback *was* taken from the secondary side - so I wouldn't advise that as an indicator of it being safe to hot swap. Agreed. Hence the "may" in my comments. ;-) My personal approach would be to avoid having the output o/c when a valve power amp was on. Even with designs that 'should' be OK, as such mistakes can be expensive. Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html |
One for the valvies 2/2....
"Pooh Bear" wrote If there's any significant signal, the damage can occur. OK, thanks for that. YW. I keep a busted KT88 in my little " rogue's gallery " of broken bits btw, that experienced being hot-swapped when the bass guitarist shouldn't have been playing. Oops. The anode is actually *molten* and the glass envelope cracked from the heat ! The output transformer survived in this case luckily. 4 x KT88s was a pricey enough mistake to make even 25 or so yrs ago. Yes and they're not too cheap nowadays! |
One for the valvies 2/2....
Keith G wrote: "Pooh Bear" wrote If there's any significant signal, the damage can occur. OK, thanks for that. YW. I keep a busted KT88 in my little " rogue's gallery " of broken bits btw, that experienced being hot-swapped when the bass guitarist shouldn't have been playing. Oops. The anode is actually *molten* and the glass envelope cracked from the heat ! The output transformer survived in this case luckily. 4 x KT88s was a pricey enough mistake to make even 25 or so yrs ago. Yes and they're not too cheap nowadays! It *only* cost him about £60 back then - but was enough that he had to pay me for the repair in installments ! Graham |
One for the valvies 2/2....
On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 07:32:15 +0000, Pooh Bear
wrote: Keith G wrote: "Pooh Bear" wrote in message ... Keith G wrote: OK, exactly why don't trannies (on valve amps) like it being run without a load? Because with no load on the secondary, the primary of the transformer just behaves like a huge choke. It's not like they are going to burst open, is it?? The current swing can cause huge 'back emfs' that can damage both output valves and the transformer itself. Also does quick 'hot-swapping' speakers while an amp's hurt it any? (Oi dun a lot o' thaat in tha parrst.... ;-) If there's any significant signal, the damage can occur. OK, thanks for that. YW. I keep a busted KT88 in my little " rogue's gallery " of broken bits btw, that experienced being hot-swapped when the bass guitarist shouldn't have been playing. The anode is actually *molten* and the glass envelope cracked from the heat ! The output transformer survived in this case luckily. 4 x KT88s was a pricey enough mistake to make even 25 or so yrs ago. Graham A molten anode? Chances are there was a pretty hefty burst of x-rays as that one went phut. Lead knickers for you! d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
One for the valvies 2/2....
Don Pearce wrote:
A molten anode? Chances are there was a pretty hefty burst of x-rays as that one went phut. Lead knickers for you! You may be joking, in which case sorry, but AFAIK, the only way you could get such radiation is to accelerate the electrons quite a bit more, and the only way you could do that was with more voltage. More current would melt a anode, its quite easy to get them glowing, as being in a vaccume it can only loose heat by radiation. Someone correct me, but I think you need somewhere in the region of 25k to start producing x-rays. -- Nick |
One for the valvies 2/2....
On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 16:33:25 +0000, Nick Gorham
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: A molten anode? Chances are there was a pretty hefty burst of x-rays as that one went phut. Lead knickers for you! You may be joking, in which case sorry, but AFAIK, the only way you could get such radiation is to accelerate the electrons quite a bit more, and the only way you could do that was with more voltage. More current would melt a anode, its quite easy to get them glowing, as being in a vaccume it can only loose heat by radiation. Someone correct me, but I think you need somewhere in the region of 25k to start producing x-rays. No, you're right. I was thinking back to my early days when I designed colour TVs. We would do an overvoltage test on line output stages that would have the anodes glowing red with about 30kV on board. We used lead screening around that box, and an x-ray dosimeter nearby. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
One for the valvies 2/2....
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 16:33:25 +0000, Nick Gorham wrote: Don Pearce wrote: A molten anode? Chances are there was a pretty hefty burst of x-rays as that one went phut. Lead knickers for you! You may be joking, in which case sorry, but AFAIK, the only way you could get such radiation is to accelerate the electrons quite a bit more, and the only way you could do that was with more voltage. More current would melt a anode, its quite easy to get them glowing, as being in a vaccume it can only loose heat by radiation. Someone correct me, but I think you need somewhere in the region of 25k to start producing x-rays. No, you're right. I was thinking back to my early days when I designed colour TVs. We would do an overvoltage test on line output stages that would have the anodes glowing red with about 30kV on board. We used lead screening around that box, and an x-ray dosimeter nearby. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Was there an appreciable increase in measurement of x-ray emission with 30kV on LOP stage compared to normal HT/EHT supply/s? Mike |
One for the valvies 2/2....
On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 17:15:33 -0000, "Mike Gilmour"
wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 16:33:25 +0000, Nick Gorham wrote: Don Pearce wrote: A molten anode? Chances are there was a pretty hefty burst of x-rays as that one went phut. Lead knickers for you! You may be joking, in which case sorry, but AFAIK, the only way you could get such radiation is to accelerate the electrons quite a bit more, and the only way you could do that was with more voltage. More current would melt a anode, its quite easy to get them glowing, as being in a vaccume it can only loose heat by radiation. Someone correct me, but I think you need somewhere in the region of 25k to start producing x-rays. No, you're right. I was thinking back to my early days when I designed colour TVs. We would do an overvoltage test on line output stages that would have the anodes glowing red with about 30kV on board. We used lead screening around that box, and an x-ray dosimeter nearby. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Was there an appreciable increase in measurement of x-ray emission with 30kV on LOP stage compared to normal HT/EHT supply/s? Mike With the normal drive voltage of 25kV there were no detectable x-rays. at 30kV the anode glowed cherry red, and they poured out. 30kV was just part of a stress test - not a normal operating condition. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
One for the valvies 2/2....
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 17:15:33 -0000, "Mike Gilmour" wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 16:33:25 +0000, Nick Gorham wrote: Don Pearce wrote: A molten anode? Chances are there was a pretty hefty burst of x-rays as that one went phut. Lead knickers for you! You may be joking, in which case sorry, but AFAIK, the only way you could get such radiation is to accelerate the electrons quite a bit more, and the only way you could do that was with more voltage. More current would melt a anode, its quite easy to get them glowing, as being in a vaccume it can only loose heat by radiation. Someone correct me, but I think you need somewhere in the region of 25k to start producing x-rays. No, you're right. I was thinking back to my early days when I designed colour TVs. We would do an overvoltage test on line output stages that would have the anodes glowing red with about 30kV on board. We used lead screening around that box, and an x-ray dosimeter nearby. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Was there an appreciable increase in measurement of x-ray emission with 30kV on LOP stage compared to normal HT/EHT supply/s? Mike With the normal drive voltage of 25kV there were no detectable x-rays. at 30kV the anode glowed cherry red, and they poured out. 30kV was just part of a stress test - not a normal operating condition. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com I'm fascinated :-) Of what duration were the tests? Did you get much corona discharge/ozone smell? Any flashovers during tests? Thanks, Mike |
All times are GMT. The time now is 12:00 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk