• 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.

Cathode Stripping and the 45 with Coleman Regulators

Member
Joined 2019
Paid Member
I am about to start building my first DHT amp - a 45 parafeed headphone amp, with the output being cascode CCS loaded (IXYS depletion-mode MOSFETs) and auto-biased.

I am using Rod Coleman's filament regulators. Re-reading the manual, I realized I had overlooked a design consideration - I do not have a delay / soft start mechanism for the B+.

How concerned should I be about applying bias when the filaments are partially warmed, along with cathode stripping? Given this is a headphone amp, the 45 bias is not aggressive, around 200V at 32mA. My understanding this is more of a concern with transmitting tubes with kV-level anode voltages.

Space, power supply, and layout considerations would make adding a soft-start PCB quite the pain. I am inclined to move forward without it, but would love to hear some opinions, seems cathode stripping is something of a controversial topic 🙂 thank you.
 
Last edited:
Unless that the amp is DC coupled, the fact of powering on simultaneously heaters and bias is the normal condition. In the tube era, a simple B&W TV used about 20 tubes and SS rectification. The set was working about 12 hours/day, and it was in use about 30 years or more, no kind of soft start nor heater/Ebb delay was used. Don't worry and use it as is.