• 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.

My Croft series 5 schematic

For the R/C: are 100u caps with 63V rating fine?
I typically use 220u or higher for cathode bypass. 63V is fine indeed

And for the cathode resistors: should I see them as protection fuses and use 1W/390R or even 0.65W rated resistors?
The dissipation for those resistors is ~0.4W, therefore 1W would be the minimum, better 2W. And use a proper fuse in B+, the EL84 is a relatively low power tube, does not make a lot of sense to use an individual fuse for each tube.
 
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by raising value of R18 (3K3) to 3K9 or 4K7 OPS quiescent current can be lowered which can lead to EL84 cooler operation .

I struggle to understand... May I ask to explain again: if I have R18=3K3 (and R17=1K) the output voltage of the voltage divider will be -13.8V, while with R18=3K9 I will get -14.3V: doesn't that mean I will have more (negative) voltage hence more quiescent current hence hotter output tubes...?
 
I'd go for self-bias, individual R/C for each EL84. A little bit less power, but not significant.

What about this solution as shown in the earlier series 5 amps:

Croft5_circuit.jpg

There is one shared cathode resistor of 120R with a bypass cap: could I apply this to my schematic as well?
 
Hi,

with your kind forum help I finally found a tube amp that I really like: a Croft series 5 with horizontal tubes inside a standard case and SS regulator. It's different from the one shown here (with that schematic). The mains lead was without PE connection, so I lifted GND from chassis through a 22R thermistor and connected PE to chassis. I replaced the 3 small lytics and am waiting for shippment of the 3 main smoothers to replace them as well. It sounds really fantastic! I am trying to figure out the schematic, but it's not so easy as I can't see some resistor color codes well. Please let me know if you think some values are off:



EDIT: just updated the schematic with R5=820k and other minor corrections
Nice find! I have never come across a Series 5 with horizontal valves, just the arrangement you see in the pair I owned.

What do you mean by "PE"? As I state in my article, the lack of a safety earth connection for the Series 5 is a potentially lethal shortcoming. I never got around this, apart from never turning the amps on without them being connected to the preamp. In my case, the signal earth for both channels was connected to the chassis of the preamp and hence safety earth, but you shouldn't have to rely on this. Does your Series 5 have a three-core mains lead?

Alex
 
I saw your article and decided to do something after reading your article. Your articles are very helpful for me because I am also working on a super micro and an integrated phono. Many thanks!

My series 5 amp had a 3core lead but PE (protective earth) was not connected, and there was no schuko plug at the end of the cable (at first the yellow/green wire in the cable was cut so short that I thought it's only a 2wire lead). The RCAs were already isolated from chassis. I lifted GND through a 22R thermistor and connected PE to chassis as shown in my shematic. The amp should be safe now, right?
 
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