Hi all,
I have a broken amp with a good preamp section and I want to replace the amp section with a gainclone.
It has a huge tranny with +/-40AC and only one center tap. This gives +/- 55V DC output. Is there any good circuit to drop the voltage down to below 35V?
Note I don't want to take apart the tranny to get 2 CT.
I had looked at Pedja site (Thanks Pedja for the info) and there is a nice discrete circuit. But I don't know if it will work with single bridge +/- supplies.
TIA.
I have a broken amp with a good preamp section and I want to replace the amp section with a gainclone.
It has a huge tranny with +/-40AC and only one center tap. This gives +/- 55V DC output. Is there any good circuit to drop the voltage down to below 35V?
Note I don't want to take apart the tranny to get 2 CT.
I had looked at Pedja site (Thanks Pedja for the info) and there is a nice discrete circuit. But I don't know if it will work with single bridge +/- supplies.
TIA.
Hi,
you are looking to drop >20V across the regulator. That is a lot of heat to get rid of.
Either buy the correct transformer to match the chipamp requirement or build an amp that suits the PSU voltage.
you are looking to drop >20V across the regulator. That is a lot of heat to get rid of.
Either buy the correct transformer to match the chipamp requirement or build an amp that suits the PSU voltage.
What are the auxilary windings that run your preamp section?
It should be possible to simply replace that center tap with another that has the right voltages for you. A 48vct with secondary windings for preamp, is a popular transformer.
It should be possible to simply replace that center tap with another that has the right voltages for you. A 48vct with secondary windings for preamp, is a popular transformer.
The sensible way is to make a couple of switch-mode buck regulators to drop the rails to whatever you need for your power-amp chip. You will need a different design for the positive and the negative rails of course as they will be sharing a common 0V.
Thank you, guys. I only know the basic electronics, so a switch mode is a bit out of the question.
The secondaries are 94Vct (1A), 74Vct (3.75A) and 15Vct (1A). The 15Vct is for the preamp section.
I wanted to use the LM3875 with +/-35V.
Guess I will use the LM3886 with +/-45V. Now that's only a 10v drop.
Can anybody tell me if Pedja discrete supply work with some modification. thanks.
http://www.pedjarogic.com/gc/supplies.htm
The secondaries are 94Vct (1A), 74Vct (3.75A) and 15Vct (1A). The 15Vct is for the preamp section.
I wanted to use the LM3875 with +/-35V.
Guess I will use the LM3886 with +/-45V. Now that's only a 10v drop.
Can anybody tell me if Pedja discrete supply work with some modification. thanks.
http://www.pedjarogic.com/gc/supplies.htm
you can't run a 3886 on +-45Vdc unless the load impedance is near open circuit.ChuckT said:I wanted to use the LM3875 with +/-35V.
Guess I will use the LM3886 with +/-45V. Now that's only a 10v drop.
Hypex modules can theoretically run on 42v
ABS Max continuous voltage for general audio amplifier applications:
LM3886TF, 37v
LM3875T, 40v
LM1875, 31v
And, at slightly beyond this point you can use fans and/or add about 4 ohms resistance in series with the speaker output.
These maximum voltages aren't something to do on purpose, but rather. . . just a note on "where" that "too far" might be.
Also, too-high voltage necessitates higher powered input or higher gain setting, and at some point either can be a mess.
Hey, is that 15v a single (15v AC) or is it a 15vct (as in 15+15 AC)?
ABS Max continuous voltage for general audio amplifier applications:
LM3886TF, 37v
LM3875T, 40v
LM1875, 31v
And, at slightly beyond this point you can use fans and/or add about 4 ohms resistance in series with the speaker output.
These maximum voltages aren't something to do on purpose, but rather. . . just a note on "where" that "too far" might be.
Also, too-high voltage necessitates higher powered input or higher gain setting, and at some point either can be a mess.
Hey, is that 15v a single (15v AC) or is it a 15vct (as in 15+15 AC)?
IMHO you easiest solution is to use half-wave rectification on your existing transformer. If you add a regulator to that, plus you have the advantage of the excellent PSRR of the power amp chip, you will wind up with a good end product.
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