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TSSA V1.6 docs and buyers list

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Salas,

I occurs to me that we may be planning to build the same kind of regulator at the same time and wonder if you would like to work together on this.

Christophe has already shared a nice cap multiplier power regulator in the SSA thread:

http://www.esperado.fr/images/stories/SSA-Crescendo/supply.gif

and I have shown the choke supply that I am using now:

diyAudio

It is now my intention to to combine elements of both these schemes to create a very nice zero FB power amp regulator.

I feel I should say that I have no formal electronic training - my training only got to AC theory - but I do have the desire to build the very best audio that is possible.

If you and or others are interested perhaps we can begin a new thread.

cheers

mike
 
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Mike, Esperado's with TL431 and zeners you linked is just a series regulator not a multiplier or some combo. TL431 plays the role of the adjustable part of the voltage ref. The specified zeners give too high a voltage base for TSSA, they should be scaled down or made to a proper resistor. In any case the power dissipation on the chip should be taken into account. Its not that simple or zero Fb as thought just because there is no additional external loop in that schematic or bcs the TL just looks like some special zener. TL431 is a chip reg with enough inside and any reg with error correction feeds back. See it as an op amp. The capacitor multiplier like the example I had shown yesterday is just a filter, corrects for no voltage sag. Now there is a possibility that a small amp will sound bigger on some voltage give that works like a compressor and expander than with a stiff PSU. Think of tube amps with their small power and valve rectifiers but somehow psycho-acoustically bold. But to know what you prefer its easy to build those. So if you will take a crack at Esperado's proven reg first, remember its easy to convert it into a simple Cmultiplier and compare or vice versa.
*Make no mistake I am no engineer too so take everything I propose with a pinch of salt. There should be a builds thread for discussing the configs, I agree. Me I will start building somewhat late though since I have a few other things unfinished yet plus I need some delayed parts and sinks.
 

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In my simple choke supply I am using the secondaries of 200VA EI tranformers 12V + 12V but I think 150VA 9V+9V would also be ok

I would suggest powering this with a torroidal 160VA or similar.

All this adds up to a VERY heavy PSU and I have separate supplies for each channel so the combined weight of my supplies is about 17kg !

I am very happy to have tried such a simple old fashioned supply. The results are great and I plan to keep this supply as a reference.

However, I worked out yesterday how much weight & money I can save on a supply if I use a combination of chokes & cap multiplier and it's substantial for both ! Also the cheaper lighter supply might give slightly better subjective results so that's why I'm going to try it.

If you decide to go for the purist simple approach I'm sure you will enjoy the results also but I would recommend you simulate your supply in spice before you make it or follow my design exactly otherwise there could be some problems with ringing.

Let me know if you need any other input from me

mike
 
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Sonny, Salas & All,

I would appreciate comments on this as a regulator section for TSSA.

This will follow some choke regulation so VHF and some audio noise will be filtered already.

My objective is simply to make the supply a little firmer and reasonably constant.

mike
 

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Sonny, Salas & All,

I would appreciate comments on this as a regulator section for TSSA.

This will follow some choke regulation so VHF and some audio noise will be filtered already.

My objective is simply to make the supply a little firmer and reasonably constant.

mike

Mike, uninspiring prediction on that one unfortunately.
 

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diyAudio Chief Moderator
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Shows good output impedance curve in the pass band, don't have time to analyze its OLG and phase margin, quite an insertion drop that will bring some dissipation & sinking plus a recalculated trafo.
 

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Perhaps we like a CFB reg for a CFB amp :D

This one has a better Vref but has slightly less good regulation compared with previous one but should be nice and fast with CFB. No idea how each of these will actually sound.

Salas, please don't feel obliged to check yet another one unless you feel particularly inspired.

I think this is my best effort provided it works as intended ! I wonder if I can squeeze a CCS into a 2.5V space

Sonny any tips or advice for me here ?
 

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In this improved version this regulator appears to give better performance in every respect.

Line regulation about -80db
Load regulation about -100db
Seems to be wider bandwidth and more stable than CFB design.
filtered zener gives good stabilty and should be quiet.

If it were left to me I would go for this one but I don't claim much expertise in this field.

Any further comments welcome :)
 

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Thanks Sonny,

I will investigate the turn on cycle to check this and try the mods you suggest. I will also investigate using a soft start and / or a Mosfet O/P device. Both of these measures should ease the strain on Q1 during turn on and subsequently allow maximum dynamics during normal use.

I will also investigate noise & stability. I'm concerned that I do not loose any of the very good qualities of my choke supplies when I add regulation. Although the choke supplies do not have good load regulation their line regulation is about as good as it gets in the throughout the entire spectrum of frequencies except low bass and I have found this to be a great asset for sound quality.

So using both Salas's Cap multiplier ( as a reference ) and my design I will inject a step signal into the load via varying values of load R and measure the regulator output currents for signs of HF ringing.

For me, particularly with an amp as transparent as your TSSA, this is a crucial issue and I will not tolerate even one cycle of ringing. I think it will be better to have less regulation or just less HF gain rather than any ringing. I will do initial tests with nominal spice caps which may be the most demanding and then after with estimated real world values.

May take a while but I post when I'm done

cheers

mike
 
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Our spice methods are slightly different. To test line & load regulation I add a 1V AC source at input and later at output and spice gives me a graphs with -xdb.

I'm not so familiar with LT spice are you adding noise to line & load simultaneously to check regulation or is your method different ?

I think a Jfet with a higher idss & resistor might give a higher impedance but perhaps in this case this is not necessary.
 
Thanks Sonny,

I will investigate the turn on cycle to check this and try the mods you suggest. I will also investigate using a soft start and / or a Mosfet O/P device. Both of these measures should ease the strain on Q1 during turn on and subsequently allow maximum dynamics during normal use.

I will also investigate noise & stability. I'm concerned that I do not loose any of the very good qualities of my choke supplies when I add regulation. Although the choke supplies do not have good load regulation their line regulation is about as good as it gets in the throughout the entire spectrum of frequencies except low bass and I have found this to be a great asset for sound quality.

So using both Salas's Cap multiplier ( as a reference ) and my design I will inject a step signal into the load via varying values of load R and measure the regulator output currents for signs of HF ringing.

For me, particularly with an amp as transparent as your TSSA, this is a crucial issue and I will not tolerate even one cycle of ringing. I think it will be better to have less regulation or just less HF gain rather than any ringing. I will do initial tests with nominal spice caps which may be the most demanding and then after with estimated real world values.

May take a while but I post when I'm done

cheers

mike

If i was you, i would add a series base resistor bjt transistor. 10 - 22R

This will prevent oscillation on the output device. :yes:
 
Well this is my latest version.

Adjust R5 for load regulation -100db to -115db
Adjust R3 to vary o/p between zener steps
Change C2 to adjust frequency compensation
R9 smooths out the compensation.
R10 may have to be bigger.
regarding stability it looks pretty good with some compensation applied but the spice results are usual pure fiction in this respect so will have to wait to see in reality.
I think will be OK if used with slow start as shown in Sonny's PSU document.

Will need to build before finalizing exactly what values to choose.

I'm of the opinion at present that chokes up line will still bring sonic benefits particularly regarding purity of the earth rail.

I have other things to do for a few days now so will come back to this later

As always all comments welcome.

mike
 

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Are we really shure this will sound better that Salas's proposed cap multipier ?

I never made a regulator for a power amp o/p stage before.

I heard that nothing can substitute for the immediate power of charge pre-stored in a capacitor so I'm wondering how much capacitance people are planning to use after the regulator ?
 
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