High Voltage power supply, source follower and ripple eater for TUBES

243 Volt well regulated.
Around 40 mA output with very little ripple ~10uV.
More or less current is possible.

Not much to say.
Uses 2 Transformers to create 260 Volt input.
Two MOSFETs to make the regulation.
 

Attachments

  • High Voltage Regulator 243V.jpg
    High Voltage Regulator 243V.jpg
    318 KB · Views: 598
Not even that. Stabilizing means regulating and also requires some reference. As Jan said, it's a source follower and capacitance multiplier and serves well as is.

In contrast to a similar BJT design, a FET's gate source voltage doesn't remain constant, not even a little bit. Correctly spoken, not even a BJT emitter follower is a regulated, stabilized PSU, but approaches it much more than any FET design due to it's »hard« base to emitter voltage.

Best regards!
 
  • Like
Reactions: jan.didden
It's a good circuit, it gives a ripple-free output voltage, it is well-designed.

But I believe correct naming is important to avoid misleading people.
I mean, you would not accept if anyone called a single ended tube amp a push-pull amp, right?

Jan
I wish I could change the name of the thread.
I will see what I can do.
What would the better name be?
'Stabilizer' is one option mentioned here.
Maybe 'High voltage source follower, stabilizer and ripple eater for TUBES.'
 
Zener diode based “regulators” are still “regulated” compared to just an RCRC filter off the raw supply. Good enough for screen voltages or preamp stages. And the SS version is good enough to power op amps. Neither usually needs .1% or less line/load regulation.

I still call it a regulator. It walks like a duck, quacks and likes water.
 
  • Like
Reactions: gerrittube