Hi,
I have recently received an MS-20L and it appears to be built for a mains supply of 115 VAC. I've measured my mains voltage at 126 VAC, so I checked the heater voltage at the socket and it's at 6.9 VAC. I searched through some old threads and found this graph:
Which shows that at 10% higher than rated heater voltage, tube life decreases by 10%...so I'm debating whether remediation is worth the effort...
I can get a variac for $100, but is that the way to go?
I have recently received an MS-20L and it appears to be built for a mains supply of 115 VAC. I've measured my mains voltage at 126 VAC, so I checked the heater voltage at the socket and it's at 6.9 VAC. I searched through some old threads and found this graph:
Which shows that at 10% higher than rated heater voltage, tube life decreases by 10%...so I'm debating whether remediation is worth the effort...
I can get a variac for $100, but is that the way to go?
rather than getting a variac which I would rather use for developing projects try to source a custom (or prebuilt) transformer which will give you the desired voltage drop for 115VAC use.
An isolation transformer might be what you are looking for. It costs a fraction of an ordinary transformer (isolated windings) and will still support large power demands.
An isolation transformer might be what you are looking for. It costs a fraction of an ordinary transformer (isolated windings) and will still support large power demands.
I will agree with a previous poster, I do not like Variacs or external transformers, cause the new avaliable power to the amp, will be the only the max Variac power, which is smaller than a electric plant or building big transformer.Hi,
I have recently received an MS-20L and it appears to be built for a mains supply of 115 VAC. I've measured my mains voltage at 126 VAC, so I checked the heater voltage at the socket and it's at 6.9 VAC. I searched through some old threads and found this graph:
Which shows that at 10% higher than rated heater voltage, tube life decreases by 10%...so I'm debating whether remediation is worth the effort...
I can get a variac for $100, but is that the way to go?
I would prefer re-winding the amp transformer to the right tension of the house.
Good luck
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