• 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.

CRC with more resistance than CLC

Hello, If I use a 500ohm resistor instead of a choke 120ohm/20H.

My voltage will get lower than if I used the choke, and I will get more ripple. It will also get even lower when the amp is under "heavy load" (!?sag) with the R than with the L. Ok.

But will I get more ripple when the amp sag (under LOAD) ? or just a lower voltage but with the same ripple than idle ?

Thank you.
 
Hello, If I use a 500ohm resistor instead of a choke 120ohm/20H.

My voltage will get lower than if I used the choke, and I will get more ripple. It will also get even lower when the amp is under "heavy load" (!?sag) with the R than with the L. Ok.

But will I get more ripple when the amp sag (under LOAD) ? or just a lower voltage but with the same ripple than idle ?

Thank you.
Of course the ripple in both situations is higher under load ...
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi
Hello, If I use a 500ohm resistor instead of a choke 120ohm/20H.

My voltage will get lower than if I used the choke, and I will get more ripple. It will also get even lower when the amp is under "heavy load" (!?sag) with the R than with the L. Ok.

But will I get more ripple when the amp sag (under LOAD) ? or just a lower voltage but with the same ripple than idle ?

Thank you.
which stuff is?
pre or amp.
If amp is a s,e or p-p?
For pre the coil is better for amp some consideration must be done

Walter
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi
Hi guys, thank you for the answers. It is for a power amp (push-pull Of 2 kt88), if I could get rid of the choke It would make the base so much smaller 😉

If I make sure I don't load down the secondary winding. I will ONLY get the voltage drop from the R(choke), so ripple would stay the same as idle ? (I guess).
 
For a p-p in class A/B with 88 is not a good idea to put the chocke. But also the resistor
If it is in class A can be resonable.
There are some vintage example of the use of the resistors in, p.e., Leak p-p amp but they are class A.
I used a chocke in p-p of 300 B class A/B biased at 40 mA each but with a GZ34 , 47 uF, chocke ( 10H 300mA) and 4 x 220 uF as filters.
Good results in terms of dynamic


Walter
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi
I am not going to catch up with reading Posts # 1 - 9.

Instead, I will respond to the Title of this Thread:
CRC with more resistance than CLC

Example:
A CRC with R = 200 Ohms
A CLRC with DCR 100 Ohms plus R 100 Ohms
Ooops, the same total resistance, to illustrate a point.

Both have the same DCV output, at the same Load current

One of them has Far Less Ripple.
Guess which one?

Adjust the Total DCR plus R to get the B+ that you want.

Do you want better load regulation (more constant DCV versus load current)?
Then use a higher voltage primary, Choke input filter, and a bleeder resistor that actually draws a fair amount of bleeder current.

Engineering at one of its best implementations!

Yes, there are tradeoffs, Expen$e, space for the parts, magnetic field spray, weight.
Deal with those, and you will have something elegant.

Done!
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi
Frederico Acardi,

OK. My thick skull finally got it!

My guess about a CRC, and a CLC power supply . . .
The Ripple will change versus the load current.

Think of the capacitive reactance of the input cap.
Charge the cap to X volts DC.
Now discharge it with 30mA for 5 msec. (the rectifiers are not conducting).
The DC voltage will drop to an amount, Y volts.

Again, Charge the cap to X volts DC.
Now discharge it with 60mA for 5 msec. (the rectifiers are not conducting).
The DC voltage will drop to LESS than Y Volts (more ripple)

The drop of the DC Volts, IS the ripple.

Is your question answered now?

Have fun designing, building, and listening!
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi
It makes sense that if the system (not loaded) shows similar ripple from R to L comparison at filter location, then-
Perhaps the quiescent background 'hum' level mite not benefit from the iron. Sound floor 'Hum' being primary battle with Hi voltage / Hi Z systems like tube amps.
Then once the music starts and loads begin to fluctuate... that ripple cant be good for sound quality-imo
But can it be readily heard? Seems such could be easily seen on a 'scope as some rendition of distortion. I believe affecting lower freq's more than hi's-
That is if ripple is proportional to load.
I had always thought (perhaps wrongly) that a resistor instead of choke in Pi network was effect of production bean counters.
Hmm
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi
My description of 'not loaded' is per quiescent definition of 'inactivity'-
Within that measure are design parameters that are, essentially, driver and bias currents of which should be excused as 'quiescent' in my previous response.
Yes, there are other loads in the operating system. But my point was to compare inactive system (no signal) to loaded system (full signal)
Now if the PP was operating in class A, then that changes everything ;<)
Jim
 
  • Like
Reactions: Frederico Acardi