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What's your favourite voltage regs?
On Jan 17, 8:20*am, "David Looser"
wrote: "Andy Evans" wrote in message No virtue in batteries, and a pig to implement. I have tried, but a good current source sounds just as good as long as you can get the hum right down. Heavy filamented DHTs were comonly run from raw AC in the old days so I don't know why you think you need to keep the hum "right down". Valve filaments should really be supplied from a voltage, rather than a current, source. The only advantage of feeding them with a current source is that it reduces the switch-on surge, but again with heavy filaments that really isn't an issue. David. Quite. I wrote a long screed on this subject and then trashed it as counterproductive to Andy's purpose. The ultrafidelista generally use AC fils because they sound best, and if they want to regulate the plate voltage, use a constant current loaded shunt regulator made with a bigger tube next to each power tube. But Andy's on a learning curve, and he won't know that all this regulation is a bridge too far -- I mean the danger of creating an over-refined tube amp that sounds just like a silicon amp but more expensive so -- until he hears it and starts backing off to where he likes the sound. You gotta do it for yourself; that's part of the fun. Andre Jute Arrival is merely the start of the next journey |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
On Jan 16, 7:29*pm, tony sayer wrote:
In article , Jim Lesurf jcgl@st- and.demon.co.uk scribeth thus In article , Andy Evans wrote: So - which voltage regs are your fave choices here? Good quality output important, but cost also a consideration. This looks right up Jim's street for starters. FWIW I tried various types of 'IC voltage regulator/stabiliser chip' some years ago and decided I wasn't keen on any of the common types. Too prone to oscillations or excess noise, etc. Newer ones may be better, but I lost interest in using them. *:-) Shouldn't you valve types be using DC from batteries;?... There are some who do. They hate capacitors so much, they design the entire amp with transformer coupling, and use batteries for power. It's all a question of your commitment to the purity of your sound -- and how many banks of car batteries your wife will let you stack up in the living room. My understanding is that the fellow in Switzerland who drove his anodes with batteries is no longer married. Andre Jute Thumbs well clear of the bricks |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
"tony sayer" wrote in message ... In article , Jim Lesurf jcgl@st- and.demon.co.uk scribeth thus In article , Andy Evans wrote: So - which voltage regs are your fave choices here? Good quality output important, but cost also a consideration. This looks right up Jim's street for starters. FWIW I tried various types of 'IC voltage regulator/stabiliser chip' some years ago and decided I wasn't keen on any of the common types. Too prone to oscillations or excess noise, etc. Newer ones may be better, but I lost interest in using them. :-) Shouldn't you valve types be using DC from batteries;?... -- Tony Sayer Yes - be like my grandfather and toddle off the the local garage once a week to get the accumulator recharged. It somehow seems to fit the ethos of using directly heated triodes 100 years after they were superceded. |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
In article
, Andy Evans wrote: Thanks Jim - I'll look at this solution. Were you thinking something like a TIP50 device? I have a box full, so that would be handy for lower currents. What would be good for 2A and over (say up to 5A rating)? Did you try the LM1084 types? I guess you didn't like the 78 types and the 317. Afraid I can't recall enough details to say. Too long ago that I did the work, and then simply settled for my 'favourite solution'. Not built a PSU like it for some years now. Most recent ones were by my old research students. :-) Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
In article , tony sayer
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf jcgl@st- and.demon.co.uk scribeth thus In article , Andy Evans wrote: So - which voltage regs are your fave choices here? Good quality output important, but cost also a consideration. This looks right up Jim's street for starters. FWIW I tried various types of 'IC voltage regulator/stabiliser chip' some years ago and decided I wasn't keen on any of the common types. Too prone to oscillations or excess noise, etc. Newer ones may be better, but I lost interest in using them. :-) Shouldn't you valve types be using DC from batteries;?... The only valves I've done PSUs for were klystrons or carcinotrons. I suspect the battery stacks for those would have been quite large. ;- Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
"Andy Evans" wrote in
message if you want really good regulation, you still can't beat the venerable LM723. Note that I really need an absolute minimum of 2A current handling, so LM723 is out and LM317 is too marginal - tubes need between 1.25 and 1.75A. LM323 is rated for 3 amps. LM 338 is rated for 5 amps. No virtue in batteries, and a pig to implement. I have tried, but a good current source sounds just as good as long as you can get the hum right down. Agreed. |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
Trevor wrote:
**The LM317 is as good as the 1084, but, if you want really good regulation, you still can't beat the venerable LM723. More inconvenient, but still one of the best performing regulators at reasonable price. For my money, I like the LM317/337 regs. Very cheap, easy to use and v ery high performance. Not very efficient though. Valve amps make enough heat without adding a source inside the chassis. Something with a lower dropout voltage would be good. Also wondering why the OP configures the filament regulator as a current source. More efficient for many filaments because they can be stringed in series, but I can't see why it's better, for a single filament, to use a high-impedance supply. Ian |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
Ian Iveson wrote:
Trevor wrote: **The LM317 is as good as the 1084, but, if you want really good regulation, you still can't beat the venerable LM723. More inconvenient, but still one of the best performing regulators at reasonable price. For my money, I like the LM317/337 regs. Very cheap, easy to use and v ery high performance. Not very efficient though. Valve amps make enough heat without adding a source inside the chassis. Something with a lower dropout voltage would be good. Also wondering why the OP configures the filament regulator as a current source. More efficient for many filaments because they can be stringed in series, but I can't see why it's better, for a single filament, to use a high-impedance supply. Ian The reason I do it that way is it sounds better. I believe the reason it sounds better, is some of the signal appears across the fill in a DHT, and the voltage reg will try and regulate that away, with a current reg, the signal is common mode, so not affected. Voltage reg certainly sounds worst than AC heating, but I think current reg is as good as AC without the problems of AC. Just my theory of course, so expecting to be wrong. -- Nick |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
Andre Jute wrote: The ultrafidelista generally use AC fils because they sound best, Because hum is good for fidelity ? Graham |
What's your favourite voltage regs?
Nick Gorham wrote: Ian Iveson wrote: Also wondering why the OP configures the filament regulator as a current source. More efficient for many filaments because they can be stringed in series, but I can't see why it's better, for a single filament, to use a high-impedance supply. The reason I do it that way is it sounds better. I believe the reason it sounds better, is some of the signal appears across the fill in a DHT, If some of the signal appears across the filament then the regulator isn't doing its job. and the voltage reg will try and regulate that away, with a current reg, the signal is common mode, so not affected. UH ? Voltage reg certainly sounds worst than AC heating, but I think current reg is as good as AC without the problems of AC. Just my theory of course, so expecting to be wrong. How utterly bizarre ! Graham |
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