• 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.

5ar4 filament voltage

Dear All,

I am building a simple HV power supply to test various amp circuits. It will be used with a variac to variate the output voltage.
My question is: if I use a tube rectifier like the 5ar4, how sensitive is this tube to the supply voltage of the filament?
If I source the filament voltage from the same transformer connected to the variac, changing the supply voltage will also change the filament supply. I have I second transformer I could use to keep the 5V supply voltage constant.

Regards,

Davide
 
Dear All,

I am building a simple HV power supply to test various amp circuits. It will be used with a variac to variate the output voltage.
My question is: if I use a tube rectifier like the 5ar4, how sensitive is this tube to the supply voltage of the filament?
If I source the filament voltage from the same transformer connected to the variac, changing the supply voltage will also change the filament supply. I have I second transformer I could use to keep the 5V supply voltage constant.

Regards,

Davide
This is an excellent place to use Si diodes, 1N4007 is recommended.
 
I plan to have the diode option, but one of the goal to have the psu is to test the system to find the exact value of the ac I need for the final design, taking into consideration the loss in the rectifier.

Thanks,

Davide

Run the 5AR4/GZ34 with a dedicated 5 VAC energizing its heater. The GE datasheet indicates +/- 10% as being acceptable. FWIW, I prefer +5%/-10% as a longevity measure.