• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

6V6 line preamp

Zactly. It's a simple AC shunt using a 6L6GC. I've been wanting to learn more about shunt supplies (particularly tubes) and had some room in the chassis and a big power transformer.

Practically speaking, I was running into limiting factors with a DC regulated tube shunt; series regulators, in comparison, are more straightforward with tubes. Though I'm not sure SS has it that much easier as a shunt. Dissipation is dissipation either way.

This does sound very good. The microphonics of the big tubes surprised me but they aren't awful.
 
diyAudio Chief Moderator
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Yes its a musically engaging sound. Some give in the bases mounting with elastic rings and sorbothane feet under the chassis could help on microphonics. Then again if you don't absolutely need line gain the CF buffer alternative version cuts on vibration sensitivity too.
 
Thanks for the tips. I'll play with some different feet to minimize microphonics. Really not a problem even with fairly loud music but I suppose different tubes will react in different ways and it could always end up in a more vibration-prone music rack.

Followers are usually what I like for "preamps" but it's nice to have found a good low gain approach, too. 12B4s and 6AH4s are appealing alternatives but not current production anymore.

Thanks for all the inspiration you provide on the forum, Salas!
 
diyAudio Chief Moderator
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In the buffer version yes, the EL84 (6BQ5) can work comparably. In the gain version not so much, it would bring excessive gain more Zout and more THD, I would have preferred a step down output transformer for that tube if in a line gain circuit.
 
Hi
I have added a small delay circuit 555 about 70 sec delay , this circuit enable the 5V voltage of the rectifier, so the heaters of the 6V6 anticipate to make load for the SSHV regs ...this circuit is powered directly by 220 volts.
 

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Nick as an end result, it can block up to one point the bumps ,for as long time as we give him on this circuit, but it also protects the regulators from falling unloaded.
The next circuit i will make that will check for the absence of voltage filament, but also the level of the DC voltage output.
 
diyAudio Chief Moderator
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So you are going to make it full proof for cathode stripping and regs loading as well as safe for any power up or power down sequence of the whole audio system. The traditional way to just avoid delayed bumps is we wait for the preamp's tubes to fully glow before turning on the power amplifier and in the end we shut him down first.
 
diyAudio Chief Moderator
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You want to make it fail benign by monitoring internal circuits and its output. Nice & sophisticated approach. Not a luxury idea exactly because you mix it with the powerful solid state DC coupled amps you got. I suggest you monitor the rectifier tube's heater too. That tube is central and less lasting than the signal tubes.