I have six 7586 Nuvistor tubes, arranged in three pairs so that the heaters in each pair are in series, and each pair is paralleled across the heater supply, 12 VDC from a Eurorack system for modular synths, rated at 1000mA maximum.
Using a 12VDC bench supply, I measured the current draw of the heaters from turn on to quiescent running. At quiescent running the aggregate current draw from all tubes is around 450mA, which will be fine.
However, on turn on, the current jumps to over 1000mA, for a fraction of second, before falling down to the 450mA value.
I'm worried that this may damage the Eurorack PSU, and wonder whether I should add some sort of current limiter in series with the 12VDC supply to the heaters.
The PSU is this one: http://www.tiptopaudio.com/manuals/uzeusps.pdf which itself is powered from a 15V 1000mA wall wart.
Using a 12VDC bench supply, I measured the current draw of the heaters from turn on to quiescent running. At quiescent running the aggregate current draw from all tubes is around 450mA, which will be fine.
However, on turn on, the current jumps to over 1000mA, for a fraction of second, before falling down to the 450mA value.
I'm worried that this may damage the Eurorack PSU, and wonder whether I should add some sort of current limiter in series with the 12VDC supply to the heaters.
The PSU is this one: http://www.tiptopaudio.com/manuals/uzeusps.pdf which itself is powered from a 15V 1000mA wall wart.
I'm worried that this may damage the Eurorack PSU, and wonder whether I should add some sort of current limiter
in series with the 12VDC supply to the heaters.
Looks like it uses a standard 3 terminal regulator, which normally has built-in current limiting. This will be probably be ok.
The initial current may be greater than 1A. This is quite normal for a valve. Some DC supplies can be caught out if the initial short-lived surge causes an overcurrent trip. Unlikely to damage a PSU as it only lasts for a few seconds, but it might stop the valves from warming up if the PSU stays tripped.
Your heater current issues are the same that I recently encountered. I wrote a short article about a fairly simple solution:
Unique Tube Heater Supply
Unique Tube Heater Supply
Your heater current issues are the same that I recently encountered. I wrote a short article about a fairly simple solution:
Unique Tube Heater Supply
Very nice! ... I will try this if I observe issues using the PSU I have.
This is why I prefer AC heaters.
The start up current is limited by the transformer.
So long as the transformer isn't way over sized things will be fine.
Quite a few people use DC heaters to get around hum problems.
In my experience AC heaters rarely cause hum if heater circuit is implemented properly.
I always offset heater AC voltage to about 50 volts DC.
The start up current is limited by the transformer.
So long as the transformer isn't way over sized things will be fine.
Quite a few people use DC heaters to get around hum problems.
In my experience AC heaters rarely cause hum if heater circuit is implemented properly.
I always offset heater AC voltage to about 50 volts DC.
- Status
- This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
- Home
- Amplifiers
- Tubes / Valves
- Nuvistor heater current inrush question