• 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.

dual power supply

Has anyone had any experience with using a dual power supply for tube amps? If so, did it work? If not, why not? I ask because It seems to me (at least in theory) that it would bypass the problems of having to use hv caps if one could split up the b+ into a negative leg and a positive leg.
 
Thanks again for your reply. My question is about the voltage. Please review the attached to determine if it would/should work. If not, why not? Let me say at this point, that I have put it into the circuit and so far, my 50W cathode resistor heats up and starts to smoke and I don't know why. Thanks for any help
 

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The common connection to the two power supply voltages is the center tap of the single power transformer and that goes to ground. The audio input and output for the whole circuit are also connected to the center tap and therefore, to ground.
Should the filament supply also go to this same ground?
 
I think what we need are simultaneous measurements of the plate and cathode voltages
with respect to ground, which is the common connection of the two supplies.
Do you have two DVMs to measure those?

If you only have one DVM, connect it floating across the cathode resistor and measure the voltage.
 
If the filament supply is connected to ground at any point, that would place the entire -550VDC supply
across the cathode resistor, which would result in 550W dissipation in that resistor, at least briefly until it fails.

If this is the case, the cathode bypass capacitor could be damaged, if its voltage rating is less than 550VDC.
And it is likely that the cathode resistor is damaged from excess dissipation.
 
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Use the negative voltage as ground and do not connect the ground tap to the circuit. Use two caps in series with resistors to balance. If the center tap is not connected it will not have a positive and negative voltage but just a voltage. As such what was the negative is now the ground to connect all signal and power grounds to.
 
Yes, just show the complete schematic.

My guess is that some node of the filament circuit is connected to ground, and so it is not completely floating.
That would place 550VDC across the cathode resistor.
 
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Anyone working with Op Amps or DC amplifiers has used dual power supplies.
Easiest way to get there is a full bridge rectifier hung on the secondary of a CT transformer.
I've used it several audio amps. Usually some common +ve HV, say 250 to 450 volts
& negative 150V. No problems at all.
 
Anyone working with Op Amps or DC amplifiers has used dual power supplies.
Easiest way to get there is a full bridge rectifier hung on the secondary of a CT transformer.
I've used it several audio amps. Usually some common +ve HV, say 250 to 450 volts
& negative 150V. No problems at all.
This is my first attempt at using a dual power supply. It seems to me that it solves some problems of having to acquire HV caps, etc.
Is it necessary to have the pos and neg legs be an exact mirror of the other? Can one leg be a pi filter and the other a choke filter? IF so, are there any advantages to doing it this way?