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#1
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Greetings. I received a suggestion that I might find help here at RAT
answering questions about winding an output transformer. I have a pair of small SE OT's. I don't know the origin. The came to me on a derelict chassis from eBay. I harvested them and set the aside. The other night, I thought I run some low voltage through to discover the turns ratio. While doing that, there was a spark at one of the leads and I promptly shut down the test. My instinct was to Ohm the windings to see if they were OK or if I let the smoke out. Unfortunately, the meter read 265K, so I concluded the tranny was toast, which lead me to the impulse to open it up. Later, I discovered the meter was toast and the tranny was probably OK. Anyhow, I had already unwound the primary (100 or 101 turns) and opened the tape on the secondary, damaging and then removing about 60 turns in the process. I am hoping I can rewind the secondary for a SE 4.5W or 5W guitar amp -- your typical 6V6 Fender Champ and the like. I've done quite a bit of reading and I'm thinking this can be done by hand if the primary is suitable. I've gathered up all sorts of information, made calculations, and whatnot, but feel that I would benefit from running this by someone who has actually done this and has a better understanding than I do. Remember, this is a for a guitar amp, with the relevant frequency range of about 82 - 5000 Hz. Since I know the secondary turns, assuming 100, I ran the low voltage test on the twin of the OT I took apart. I think the twin (still intact) has 3423 turns. Subtracting 60, the victimized OT has 3363 primary turns left. I've been trying to determine the wire gauge on the primary without a proper tool to do it. Using the scrap, I am getting about 3.6z on 63" of wire. I've got 642 ohms left on the primary winding, suggesting 11,235". At about 4" per turn, that's about 2800 turns. I go with the higher number from the electrical test, but I think this is reasonable confirmation. I also found a chart stating 54.97 ohms per 1000" for 38 AWG. If I have 12,000" then 12 * 55 = 660 ohms, and I have 642 ohms. So, I believe the wire is 38 AWG. Is this heavy enough for a 5W OT? Please read on for the description of the lams. I'd like to wind a 4-8-16 ohm secondary. Assuming 3363 primary turns, and 5K: 4-8-16, I'm coming up with turns ratios of 35.4-25-17.7 and secondary turns of 95-135-190, respectively. Is this the correct calculation? I've got another chart that shows current capacity at 600 cm/Amp and 700 cm/Amp. I figure your typical Champ amp, where Va=350 and Ia=0.045 The current ratio is the primary multiplied by the turns ratio? IOW, 45mA * 35.4 = 1.6A? The chart says 19 or 20 AWG secondary wire for this measure. It seems on the heavy side to me, but I don't really know much about this. What is the correct sizing of the secondary wire gauge? The lams, the core area is 18mm x 19mm = 3.42cm2 = .52 sq in. The I's measure 54mm x 9mm. The E's measure 54mm x 36mm. The spaces between the E's are about 9mm x 27mm -- thats the space where the bobbin fits. The stack is 19mm high, but you already know that from the core area measure. Everything seems to fit nicely in multiple of 9mm, so I guess this is a European tranny, though I am in the US. That is why I'm using metric measures -- it seems to fit. I got rather confused trying to figure the number of primary turns, but have concluded that 3400 turns is plenty. Any objection/other thoughts? I don't know what sort of lams these are. Any way to tell? Eyeballing it, the 19mm stack is about 60 lams. I am not wanting to take them apart and make a mess of them. Lastly, the air gap. It's there undisturbed. I don't have any way of measuring it. Im inclined to leave it. I my estimation, it is not as thick as a piece of copier paper so maybe 0.05mm? I'd be very grateful if someone will help me out here and get me pointed in the right direction. If you think what I've got isn't appropriate for a 5W amp, what then? Please suggest another output tube. Thanks. Phil |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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Phil_S wrote:
Greetings. I received a suggestion that I might find help here at RAT answering questions about winding an output transformer. If you want a 'transformer winding' project, have fun. let everyone know how it went. otherwise... Rather than trying to repair an output transformer I would consider looking for an equivalent transformer on E-bay or Amazon and not bother playing with surplus stuff. Old transformers might cook in a year or two (been there, done that), and then you're desperately looking for a replacement after all that work building the amp. An inexpensive off-the-shelf output transformer may cost less than $50 if you look hard, will most likely perform better than your specs, and shouldn't burn out for a very very very long time. And you can stock spares easily, if you anticipate eventual failure. |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On Nov 3, 12:44*pm, "Phil_S" wrote:
Greetings. *I received a suggestion that I might find help here at RAT answering questions about winding an output transformer. I have a pair of small SE OT's. I don't know the origin. *The came to me on a derelict chassis from eBay. *I harvested them and set the aside. *The other night, I thought I run some low voltage through to discover the turns ratio. *While doing that, there was a spark at one of the leads and I promptly shut down the test. *My instinct was to Ohm the windings to see if they were OK or if I let the smoke out. * Never ever trust your own inexperienced instint - usually you will find yourself in trouble. Unfortunately, the meter read 265K, so I concluded the tranny was toast, which lead me to the impulse to open it up. * Impulsiveness is even worse than instictiveness. Don't worry, I've been there.... Later, I discovered the meter was toast and the tranny was probably OK. Anyhow, I had already unwound the primary (100 or 101 turns) and opened the tape on the secondary, damaging and then removing about 60 turns in the process. I am hoping I can rewind the secondary for a SE 4.5W or 5W guitar amp -- * your typical 6V6 Fender Champ and the like. *I've done quite a bit of reading and I'm thinking this can be done by hand if the primary is suitable. *I've gathered up all sorts of information, made calculations, and whatnot, but feel that I would benefit from running this by someone who has actually done this and has a better understanding than I do. *Remember, this is a for a guitar amp, with the relevant frequency range of about 82 - 5000 Hz. Since I know the secondary turns, assuming 100, I ran the low voltage test on the twin of the OT I took apart. *I think the twin (still intact) has 3423 turns. *Subtracting 60, the victimized OT has 3363 primary turns left. I've been trying to determine the wire gauge on the primary without a proper tool to do it. * Maybe you should invest in a mircrometer. There are nice digital read out types available and then consult the wire tables for "grade 2" magnetic winding wire with polyester-imide enamel which will tell you the copper wire dia and overall dia with enamel, which is what you can measure. Using the scrap, I am getting about 3.6z on 63" of wire. I've got 642 ohms left on the primary winding, suggesting 11,235". *At about 4" per turn, that's about 2800 turns. *I go with the higher number from the electrical test, but I think this is reasonable confirmation. *I also found a chart stating 54.97 ohms per 1000" for 38 AWG. *If I have 12,000" then 12 * 55 = 660 ohms, and I have 642 ohms. *So, I believe the wire is 38 AWG. *Is this heavy enough for a 5W OT? *Please read on for the description of the lams. One 6V6 in SE beam tetrode mode needs Ea = Eg2 at +300Vdc max, and Ia = 36mA. RL required = 0.9 x Ea / Ia = 0.9 x 300 / 0.036 = 7,500 ohms. If the secondary load was 7.5 ohms the ZR = 1,000:1, so TR = 31.6:1. Primary winding wire resistance should be less than 375 ohms, and secondary winding resistance should be less than 0.4 ohms. Inductance of the primary with **correct air gap** should be 30Henrys where the measurement of inductance is made with no secondary load and using a 10 ohm R in series with primary and a voltage test signal using 50Vrms at mains frequency. Measure the small voltage across the 10R. Then current through inductance = V / 10. Then measure voltage across inductance. Reactance in ohms of primary inductance = V / I . Inductance = Reactance / ( 6.28 x frequency of test signal ). I'd like to wind a 4-8-16 ohm secondary. *Assuming 3363 primary turns, *and 5K: 4-8-16, I'm coming up with turns ratios of 35.4-25-17.7 and secondary turns of 95-135-190, respectively. *Is this the correct calculation? 5,000 : 4 is a ZR = 1,250. TR = sq.rt ZR = 35.3 : 1. If you have 3,363 P turns, then for 4 ohms you need 95 Sec turns. I've got another chart that shows current capacity at 600 cm/Amp and 700 cm/Amp. *I figure your typical Champ amp, where Va=350 and Ia=0.045 * Maximum Pda for 6V6 = 12Watts. With Ea = +350Vdc and Ia = 0.045A, Pda = 15.75Watts and much too high, so please do try to arrange your efforts to minimise the chance of smoke, rather than to maximise the chance. If you wanted RL = 5k, then you can figure out exactly what Ea and Ia you can have. Using an OPT with 10% winding losses, expect anode efficiency = 40%. So if Pda = 12W, then expect 4.8W max. PO = Va squared / RL. 4.8 = Va squared / 5,000, So Va = 155Vrms = 219V peak which gives Ia peak swing 0.044 A. Let Ia be 5% more than peak Ia swing = 0.46A. If Pda = 12W, then Ea = Pda / Ia = 12 / 0.046 = +259Vdc. current ratio is the primary multiplied by the turns ratio? * yes. IOW, 45mA * 35.4 = 1.6A? The chart says 19 or 20 AWG secondary wire for this measure. It seems on the heavy side to me, but I don't really know much about this.. What is the correct sizing of the secondary wire gauge? From my webpage at http://www.turneraudio.com.au/se-output-trans-calc.htm 18. Calculate primary winding resistance, Rwp. Rwp = ( Np x TL ) / ( 44,000 x Pdia x Pdia ) where 44,000 is a constant, and P dia is the copper dia from the wire tables .......Rwp, ohms From this you can derive the dia of the wire if you know the wanted maximum winding resistance. The lams, the core area is 18mm x 19mm = 3.42cm2 = .52 sq in. You have a pair of very small OPTs which one might find in a low quality radio set which were made in thousands and which employed a 6V6 audio output tube. The I's measure 54mm x 9mm. *The E's measure 54mm x 36mm. *The spaces between the E's are about 9mm x 27mm -- that’s the space where the bobbin fits. *The stack is 19mm high, but you already know that from the core area measure. Everything seems to fit nicely in multiple of 9mm, so I guess this is a European tranny, though I am in the US. *That is why I'm using metric measures -- it seems to fit. *I got rather confused trying to figure the number of primary turns, but have concluded that 3400 turns is plenty. *Any objection/other thoughts? If I were you I would get something better from Hammond, then you'd save yourself all the trouble of mucking around with these little trannies. I don't know what sort of lams these are. *Any way to tell? *Eyeballing it, the 19mm stack is about 60 lams. *I am not wanting to take them apart and make a mess of them. Lastly, the air gap. *It's there undisturbed. *I don't have any way of measuring it. *I’m inclined to leave it. *I my estimation, it is not as thick as a piece of copier paper so maybe 0.05mm? The air gap may be about right, but I doubt you would have enough primary inductance for good bass. Larger heavier OPT from Hammond would be so much better, and because you want such low power they will be fairly cheap. Something made in the USA should be available. Besides, you need to save the economy from going bust, so SPEND. I know Obama and the Tea Party have their conflicting ideas which you may or may not agree with. I'd be very grateful if someone will help me out here and get me pointed in the right direction. *If you think what I've got isn't appropriate for a 5W amp, what then? *Please suggest another output tube. If I were going for a 5 watt SE amp I would use a 6L6GC in SE triode mode, and then the primary load = ( Ea / Ia ) - ( 2x Ra ). Ra is the internal dynamic anode resistance, about 2,000 ohms for 6L6 at Ia = 50mA. The trioded 6L6 will give you a "firmer" sound with greater depth and will be less "frizzy" without punch which typifies SE beam tetrodes and pentodes. EL34 in triode is also excellent. Patrick Turner. Thanks. Phil |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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Hi Flipper. Long time, no see! In between....
"flipper" wrote in message ... On Tue, 2 Nov 2010 21:44:42 -0400, "Phil_S" wrote: Greetings. I received a suggestion that I might find help here at RAT answering questions about winding an output transformer. I have a pair of small SE OT's. I don't know the origin. The came to me on a derelict chassis from eBay. I harvested them and set the aside. The other night, I thought I run some low voltage through to discover the turns ratio. While doing that, there was a spark at one of the leads and I promptly shut down the test. My instinct was to Ohm the windings to see if they were OK or if I let the smoke out. Unfortunately, the meter read 265K, so I concluded the tranny was toast, which lead me to the impulse to open it up. Later, I discovered the meter was toast and the tranny was probably OK. Anyhow, I had already unwound the primary (100 or 101 turns) and opened the tape on the secondary, damaging and then removing about 60 turns in the process. I am hoping I can rewind the secondary for a SE 4.5W or 5W guitar amp -- your typical 6V6 Fender Champ and the like. I've done quite a bit of reading and I'm thinking this can be done by hand if the primary is suitable. I've gathered up all sorts of information, made calculations, and whatnot, but feel that I would benefit from running this by someone who has actually done this and has a better understanding than I do. Remember, this is a for a guitar amp, with the relevant frequency range of about 82 - 5000 Hz. Since I know the secondary turns, assuming 100, I ran the low voltage test on the twin of the OT I took apart. I think the twin (still intact) has 3423 turns. Subtracting 60, the victimized OT has 3363 primary turns left. I've been trying to determine the wire gauge on the primary without a proper tool to do it. Using the scrap, I am getting about 3.6z on 63" of wire. I've got 642 ohms left on the primary winding, suggesting 11,235". At about 4" per turn, that's about 2800 turns. I go with the higher number from the electrical test, but I think this is reasonable confirmation. I also found a chart stating 54.97 ohms per 1000" for 38 AWG. If I have 12,000" then 12 * 55 = 660 ohms, and I have 642 ohms. So, I believe the wire is 38 AWG. Is this heavy enough for a 5W OT? Please read on for the description of the lams. I'd like to wind a 4-8-16 ohm secondary. Assuming 3363 primary turns, and 5K: 4-8-16, I'm coming up with turns ratios of 35.4-25-17.7 and secondary turns of 95-135-190, respectively. Is this the correct calculation? I've got another chart that shows current capacity at 600 cm/Amp and 700 cm/Amp. I figure your typical Champ amp, where Va=350 I presume that 350 is a typo. It should be 250V. **No, we typically see the 6V6 run at 350V, not a typo. I know what the spec sheet says. I suppose I didn't account for, when Va rises, Ia falls. No matter, though. ** and Ia=0.045 The current ratio is the primary multiplied by the turns ratio? IOW, 45mA * 35.4 = 1.6A? 45mA is the DC idle current. The signal can then swing from 0 to twice idle so maximum RMS, at clipping, would be .707 of that, or 31.8mArms (rounded). 4 Ohm secondary would then be 1.13Arms. **Well, that's good news. At 1.13A, smaller wire size is in play. LOL, the chart says I can use 21 AWG.** You can confirm that with P=I^2R, which comes to 5 Watts in both cases (ignoring winding losses). The chart says 19 or 20 AWG secondary wire for this measure. It seems on the heavy side to me, but I don't really know much about this. What is the correct sizing of the secondary wire gauge? Patrick will probably be by, and he's the tranny expert, so I'll leave that to him. **Yes, I see a pile of good instruction from him. It will probably take me hours to comprehend it, but seems to be the guidance I was seeking.** The lams, the core area is 18mm x 19mm = 3.42cm2 = .52 sq in. The I's measure 54mm x 9mm. The E's measure 54mm x 36mm. The spaces between the E's are about 9mm x 27mm -- thats the space where the bobbin fits. The stack is 19mm high, but you already know that from the core area measure. Everything seems to fit nicely in multiple of 9mm, so I guess this is a European tranny, though I am in the US. That is why I'm using metric measures -- it seems to fit. I got rather confused trying to figure the number of primary turns, but have concluded that 3400 turns is plenty. Any objection/other thoughts? I don't know what sort of lams these are. Any way to tell? Eyeballing it, the 19mm stack is about 60 lams. I am not wanting to take them apart and make a mess of them. Lastly, the air gap. It's there undisturbed. I don't have any way of measuring it. Im inclined to leave it. I my estimation, it is not as thick as a piece of copier paper so maybe 0.05mm? I'd be very grateful if someone will help me out here and get me pointed in the right direction. If you think what I've got isn't appropriate for a 5W amp, what then? From your description it sounds like it might have been a 5W 6V6, or similar, OPT to begin with. Please suggest another output tube. Something wrong with a 6V6? What would you be shooting for in a different tube? **No, 6V6 is good. What I meant is, if this is a 2W OT, please suggest a tube that will work with that. It appears I'll be OK, so we don't need to go there.** You can save cost, depending on what spare transformers you have lying around, with oddball heater voltages. If you want a smaller base then there are 9 pin 6V6 equivalents like the 6CM6 or the 'car radio' 12AB5. **Way cool, if they can be found.** In 7 pin there's the equivalent (to 250V) 6AQ5 or 'car radio' 12AQ5. **Yes, I have about 50 6AQ5's, thanks. It's probably my favorite power tube.** For the same plate load with more gain there's the 9-pin 6BQ5 or equivalent (but different 9-pin basing) 6GK6. **Yes, I put 6GK6 in my 18W, but, again, this is not for the contingency of it being a 2W OT.** Thanks. Phil Thanks for the help. Phil |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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![]() "Big Bad Bob" wrote in message m... Phil_S wrote: Greetings. I received a suggestion that I might find help here at RAT answering questions about winding an output transformer. If you want a 'transformer winding' project, have fun. let everyone know how it went. otherwise... **Yes, this is about fun with transformers. I could just buy one. I'm curious.** |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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![]() "Patrick Turner" wrote in message ... snipped it all for brevity, content was fabulous Patrick: I didn't want to be presumptive. A friend said you hang out here. I couldn't find your web pages. Unfortunately, there is another Patrick Turner who plays US Pro Football. Searching turned up nothing. Thank you for your thoughtful reply and for the link to your pages. I appreciate your comments about not trusting inexperienced instinct; impulsiveness is even worse. You don't know the half of it. This was one of those days when I was just looking for an excuse to do something like this. I've been dabbling in building guitar amplifiers for a number of years. I've done about a dozen. Only the first one was from a kit, so I've got reasonable amateur level experience. I still have much to learn. I'm a curious person. As I said, I figured this was a cheap OT and it was an opportunity to see what makes it tick. This is about fun with transformers. I didn't imagine I'd get from this "project" a high quality OT. Even so, for a guitar amp, I believe quality is a bit less of an issue. I don't need 20Hz at the low end or 20KHz at the top end. As for the meter, I was really quite surprised to see that I'd toasted it. It is a Triplett 9045, which is OK for a hobby meter and has stood by me well for several years. I've got two more hand held meters and I just put the old Fluke 8600A bench meter up for a battery charge. I'm sorry to see that Triplett go. It seems to be working on everything but the Ohms. shrug Thanks also for some calculations, confirmations and corrections. This, with your SE pages on the web should keep me busy for a while. I'm feeling much better about being pointed in the right direction. I am hoping for the simple satisfaction of making something that works. How well it works can be a surprise. Some of the measurements will be difficult to make with a limited amount of test equipment. I think you've given me the excuse I need to get the digital caliper. This is an inexpensive tool and who doesn't need another tool? I can easily get a new tranny. That, as you've gathered, isn't the point. This is an opportunity to learn something. I had trouble letting it pass me by. You've pretty well confirmed my suspicions about the quality of what I've got. I'm OK with it. Finally, your suggestion about running a 6L6 as a triode is just wonderful! I'm sitting on a box of a dozen Russian 6P3C (not the 6P3C-N), as well as a few used real USA made 6L6 and 5881 tubes, and I've been looking for an excuse to use them. This might be just the thing. Best regards, Phil |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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OK, I've got some "findings" that suggest I can't get from here to there.
1) For 6V6 at 4.8W, I really should be using 32 AWG. Further work suggests the best case it that the existing primary wind is 37 AWG and more likely 38 AWG. This is too thin. The core area is small that calculations suggest is needed. 2) The primary resistance for 3363 estimate turns is 643 ohms. Patrick says it should be less than 375 ohms. This would probably be true for 32 AWG, I estimate I'll need about 1000 ft, and that is 168 ohms (table value). 3) The remaining margin on the bobbin is about 3mm. If I did the calc right, I've got room for about 90 turns of #20; I need 95 for a 4z winding. Maybe I'm not "getting it" completely here. Maybe I've flubbed a few of the numbers. Even so, the whole thing seems too small. I think maybe I've got a 1-2W OT. Maybe I can rewind this for half a 12AU7 -- maybe I can make a one tube amp? Maybe a 12AU7 pre with a 6C4 output? I guess I'm hell bent on finding a use for this piece of junk. Remember, fun with tubes and transformers -- the process is as important as the product. I'm looking to change the plan here. I think it is not going to work for a 6V6 or a 6AQ5. Flipper, you asked about the wire chart. It's here at the end of this article. http://www.deerloverssite.org/TRANSFORMERS.html Patrick Turner wrote the following: "If you wanted RL = 5k, then you can figure out exactly what Ea and Ia you can have. Using an OPT with 10% winding losses, expect anode efficiency = 40%. So if Pda = 12W, then expect 4.8W max. PO = Va squared / RL. 4.8 = Va squared / 5,000, So Va = 155Vrms = 219V peak which gives Ia peak swing 0.044 A. Let Ia be 5% more than peak Ia swing = 0.46A. If Pda = 12W, then Ea = Pda / Ia = 12 / 0.046 = +259Vdc." Patrick, you are losing me in this calculation. I'm fine until you discuss "peak swing 0.044A" Where is that from? So far I got to Vrms = 155, Vpeak = 204, but don't follow the Ia peak swing. I see .046A = .044 * 1.05. Also, is that a typo, "Let Ia be 5%...... = 0.46A", did you mean 0.046A? I'm trying to replicate the calculation for a 1W 12AU7 amp, assume RL=7700...if I could follow it, I could figure it! I'm sure it's obvious to you, but not to me! Thanks. Phil |
#8
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On Nov 4, 1:41*am, "Phil_S" wrote:
"Patrick Turner" *wrote in message ... snipped it all for brevity, content was fabulous Patrick: I didn't want to be presumptive. *A friend said you hang out here. *I couldn't find your web pages. My web site was down since last Friday until yesterday. Unfortunately, Melbourne IT who are licensed to register domain names sent my renewal notice invoice to the wrong email address and my rego ran out so they pulled the switch. I paid them last Monday and last night my site re-appeared and also re- allowed my email related to my website. perhaps my site may take time to re-appear at servers around the globe. Be patient, all will be OK in the fullness of time. *Unfortunately, there is another Patrick Turner who plays US Pro Football. *Searching turned up nothing. *Thank you for your thoughtful reply and for the link to your pages. There are quite a few ppl with my name. Maybe there is not anything really unfortunate about this IMHO. I played football at school in the 1950s/60s. We played what we call Rugby Union, and it is a British origin form of football which leaves you battered and bruised every time it is played. I was a "second rower". I have never liked "footy" very much and I was much happier riding a bicycle. I appreciate your comments about not trusting inexperienced instinct; impulsiveness is even worse. *You don't know the half of it. *This was one of those days when I was just looking for an excuse to do something like this. *I've been dabbling in building guitar amplifiers for a number of years. *I've done about a dozen. *Only the first one was from a kit, so I've got reasonable amateur level experience. *I still have much to learn. *I'm a curious person. *As I said, I figured this was a cheap OT and it was an opportunity to see what makes it tick. *This is about fun with transformers. I didn't imagine I'd get from this "project" a high quality OT. *Even so, for a guitar amp, I believe quality is a bit less of an issue. *I don't need 20Hz at the low end or 20KHz at the top end. OK. But guitar amps benefit from having rugged OPts and larger than required, or larger than what some damn accountant allowed to be fitted to a radio in 1955. As for the meter, I was really quite surprised to see that I'd toasted it.. It is a Triplett 9045, which is OK for a hobby meter and has stood by me well for several years. *I've got two more hand held meters and I just put the old Fluke 8600A bench meter up for a battery charge. *I'm sorry to see that Triplett go. *It seems to be working on everything but the Ohms. shrug Maybe your meter is fixable. But even a simple old multimeter circuit can be difficult and confusing to analyse. I once totally fried nearly all solid state devices in a 20MHz Dual trace oscilloscope by using a 1: 30 step up transformer to examine really low voltage signals. All went well until I accidently touched the low voltage input winding onto +70Vdc. This sent a momentary pulse of +2000V into the input, and solid state really hates that. I spent $200 to fix it. I got most functions back, but not quite all and it was never the same again. I learnt to be more careful, and to use cheap oscilloscopes. Thanks also for some calculations, confirmations and corrections. *This, with your SE pages on the web should keep me busy for a while. *I'm feeling much better about being pointed in the right direction. *I am hoping for the simple satisfaction of making something that works. *How well it works can be a surprise. *Some of the measurements will be difficult to make with a limited amount of test equipment. *I think you've given me the excuse I need to get the digital caliper. *This is an inexpensive tool and who doesn't need another tool? An oscilloscope would be a great boon to your toolset. Any old CRO is better than none, something analog, single trace and only 1MHz of bw will do fine, and maybew you find something pre-used which is a bargain. Or else set up an old PC and sound card, but sound cards just don't like accidental high voltage inputs when measuring tube amp voltages well over +/- 50 peak volts. So you'd need to make a circuit to limit the voltage levels and protect the PC which means yet another lot of learnt skills. I can easily get a new tranny. *That, as you've gathered, isn't the point. |
#9
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On Nov 4, 5:12*am, "Phil_S" wrote:
OK, I've got some "findings" that suggest I can't get from here to there. 1) For 6V6 at 4.8W, I really should be using 32 AWG. *Further work suggests the best case it that the existing primary wind is 37 AWG and more likely 38 AWG. *This is too thin. *The core area is small that calculations suggest is needed. 2) The primary resistance for 3363 estimate turns is 643 ohms. *Patrick says it should be less than 375 ohms. *This would probably be true for 32 AWG, I estimate I'll need about 1000 ft, and that is 168 ohms (table value). 3) The remaining margin on the bobbin is about 3mm. *If I did the calc right, I've got room for about 90 turns of #20; I need 95 for a 4z winding. Maybe I'm not "getting it" completely here. *Maybe I've flubbed a few of the numbers. *Even so, the whole thing seems too small. *I think maybe I've got a 1-2W OT. OK first of all, if the primary winding resistance, RwP = 5% of the primary RL and the RwS was 5% of the secondary Rw, then total winding losses are 10%, and this is a good figure for a fairly good quality SE OPT. But in fact many small radio OPTs meant for 6V6 or similar tubes the total losses are up to 25%, and hence Rw of either P or S windings can exceed 10% of the corresponding load values. Many old OPT had primary wire size which was barely able to take the idle current of say 50mA in many apps. if a tube went into saturation from bias failure then Ia might rise to 150mA and the heat in a winding of say 600 ohms = 13.5W and the OPT dies from a fused winding or shorted turns. Many old radios were designed so only 3 watts could ever come from the anode circuit. But where the the winding losses were say 25%, then 0.75W would be lost in the OPT and you'd get only 2.25W from the secondary, but quite enough for a radio on the mantle peice to tell you the football score. Maybe I can rewind this for half a 12AU7 -- maybe I can make a one tube amp? Maybe a 12AU7 pre with a 6C4 output? *I guess I'm hell bent on finding a use for this piece of junk. Remember, fun with tubes and transformers -- the process is as important as the product. I'm looking to change the plan here. *I think it is not going to work for a 6V6 or a 6AQ5. Flipper, you asked about the wire chart. *It's here at the end of this article.http://www.deerloverssite.org/TRANSFORMERS.html Patrick Turner wrote the following: "If you wanted RL = 5k, then you can figure out exactly what Ea and Ia you can have. Using an OPT with 10% winding losses, expect anode efficiency = 40%. So if Pda = 12W, then expect 4.8W max. PO = Va squared / RL. 4.8 = Va squared / 5,000, So Va = 155Vrms = 219V peak which gives Ia peak swing 0.044 A. Let Ia be 5% more than peak Ia swing = 0.46A. If Pda = 12W, then Ea = Pda / Ia = 12 / 0.046 = +259Vdc." Patrick, you are losing me in this calculation. *I'm fine until you discuss "peak swing 0.044A" *Where is that from? So far I got to Vrms = 155, Vpeak = 204, but don't follow the Ia peak swing. I see .046A = .044 * 1.05. Also, is that a typo, "Let Ia be 5%...... = 0.46A", did you mean 0.046A? Peak Current load swing = peak V swing / RL = 219 / 5,000 = 0.0438 Amps peak. In any SE amp the idle Iadc should be about = peak load I swing plus 10%, or about 48mA in this example. I'm trying to replicate the calculation for a 1W 12AU7 amp, assume RL=7700...if I could follow it, I could figure it! *I'm sure it's obvious to you, but not to me! RL for a single triode section of 12AU7 would be about 16,000 ohms. With both triodes in parallel, say 8,000 ohms. OK, you want 1W? The Va rms = sq.rt ( PO x RL ) = sq.rt ( 1 x 8,000 ) = 89Vrms. Ia rms = 89 / 8,000 = 11.1mA, so peak Ia = 1.414 x 11.1 mA rms = 15.8mA. The Ea and Ia and the rest you can work out maybe..... Patrick Turner. Thanks. Phil |
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![]() "Patrick Turner" wrote in message ... ------------------ The Ea and Ia and the rest you can work out maybe..... Patrick Turner. --------------------- Yes, Patrick, I think I can! Also, I realized after posting that 7.7K is wrong, as your typical 1W 12AU7 guitar amp is often built with a Fender reverb transformer as the OT. I believe this item has 22.5K on the primary. Using 16K as the assumed primary on that POS OT I'm trying to save, it looks like I only need 107 turns for the secondary and that's good news! Thanks again for your help. Phil |
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On Nov 5, 12:52*am, "Phil_S" wrote:
"Patrick Turner" *wrote in message ... ------------------ The Ea and Ia and the rest you can work out maybe..... Patrick Turner. --------------------- Yes, Patrick, I think I can! *Also, I realized after posting that 7.7K is wrong, as your typical 1W 12AU7 guitar amp is often built with a Fender reverb transformer as the OT. *I believe this item has 22.5K on the primary. Using 16K as the assumed primary on that POS OT I'm trying to save, it looks like I only need 107 turns for the secondary and that's good news! Thanks again for your help. Phil I recall Fender commonly uses a 12AT7 paralleled as the driver amp into the reverb tranny to excite the springs. Not much power is needed. But Fender made a stand alone reverb unit with its own PSU with 5Y3, 6V6, 12AX7 and spring unit in a box. Maybe that's the best reverb unit ever made. But I once installed a reverb unit in a big 100W Marshal head and I used a paralleled 12AT7 into a 5k:4,8,16 trannny meant as a 100V line tranny for powering ceiling speakers. The real low bass performance was not critical. The load the 12AT7 is setable depending on the sec taps, so if you have a tank coil load of 8 ohms and that connects to to a 4 ohm tap, the primary load becomes 10k and not 5k, so then the Vswing is wider and you get less THD and more power. 12AU7 or 6SN7 or 12BH7 are als good. The small "5W" rated OPT was available as a line tranny from an electronics store. The tranny was ungapped, but because Iadc was only about 8mAdc, the core did not saturate fully so it worked very well. I said to the guy for whom I worked that the range of reverb went from nothing, to slightlly warm, then to molten chocolate, then to being like tunnel a mile long. He said I was wrong about the chocolate - " ....I reckon its like nice hot wet cow****". OK. I wasn't to argue. He was very happy. But my circuit was based on the Fender design and worked really well. I had to make sure the spring unit was placed as far away from the mains tranny or else they pick up a lotta hum. A little dasha reverb goes a long way.... Patrick Turner. |
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On Nov 7, 3:21*pm, flipper wrote:
On Sat, 6 Nov 2010 19:41:11 -0700 (PDT), Patrick Turner wrote: Others concluded........... snip I'm strange. I can't understand why anyone wants the weird responses some tone stacks give. For starters, the pickup response isn't flat. But then I think a bit like anyone technical, and I have a mind full of mental pictures about tone controls and if adjust a knob labelled 'treble', then ONLY above 1kHz will be adusted up or down in level, leaving everything else fixed. Ditto for bass. Might be fine if the source is flat but a guitar pickup isn't. I've never measured the response of a geetah pick up Btw, why are you 'screwing up' a nice flat source anyway? Well why would anyone? But the sound is dull and boring if the response is flat. Guitar players do like to boost the treble to hell and brighten the sound, and to the extent that the upper HF harmonics are what cause the amp to overload giving "intersteing sounding" IMD products which are different to where LF F are allowed to be so high in amplitude they modulate the HF. But hey, a bit of either will do as long as whatever can be done to alter the sound and uniquify the sound can be done, at least temporarily. Well, there is only so much that can be done with tone controls as we know them without using say 3 tone stacks cascaded, or using some form of digitally generated artifacts and sampling and processing that so many have become reliant upon to try to get more uniqueness than the next guitarist along. And varying volume should have no effect on tone control settings. So much for the ear's frequency response shift at low volumes, eh? I also like musicians to rely on their creativity rather than tone controls or brand of amps to entertain me, The musician has no control over the magnetic pickup characteristics (other than picking one). Probably not. But there's more than one pick up. One might be forgiven for thinking a graphic eq unit would do more for most musos but their range of F is wide, so bass, mid and treble is all that can be used, lest some wanted F become almost silent and some unwanted F become prominent. The whole business of the electric guitar sound is based around the basically pleasant sound of a plucked string resonating a peice of thin wood of a box with a hole in it. But rock music artists want a lot more excitement than an amlified acoustic guitar; they want the sound of POWER and want their sound to generate awe in the listeners, a sence of urgency, and stress, and the opposite of relaxation, they want conveyed passion, a wild ride. For that you just basically need square waves fed to a speaker, and an over driven tube amp operating in class C during sustained tones does the job best. This passion recipe is carried too far in most "Metal" players, and is mightily boring to most ppl over 30 because it invokes a memory of aimless energy at a time when most have learnt to aim their energy, and they wish to understand lyrics which they wish to be meaningful and without sub-titles, and they want less repititious noise and more line to line diversity. So hence there is actually a wide variety of use for guitar amps between being flat and distortion free and being radically overdriven. Just exactly what is the 'pure, natural, uncorrupted sound' of a vibrating string made of what tensioned over what? Hint: There isn't one. You have asked an exactly good question. A Stradivarius is claimed to sound better than a cheap Chinese knock off, or any other violin for that matter. Why? They're 'technically' the same thing: just strings over wood, and even shaped the same. Well, the Stradi just sounds better to the many people who like the music written for violin by masters such as Bach, Beethoven, Motzart et all. The balance of harmonic levels achieved produced by resonant wooden boxes and strings as put together 200 years ago by italian masters is necta to the ears; like the finest of wine to the palete, like the most moving art or sculture is to the eye. Maybe one day the Chinese produce better violins than the old Italian masters. Don't hold your breath. I've heard some good electrified vilolins but its rare. So it is with electrified harps and cellos and with added digital effects. The music of the masters of 200 years ago has lasted. It has not been dropped and forgotten. It has of course been used as a basic source for inspiration and composition for works by bands such as the Beatles and where electric guitars were at the forefront. The harpsicord was the popular instrument equivalent of the modern electrified guitar around which many gathered to sing together as a joie de vie passage of life. Just because ppl didn't have amps in 1750 didn't mean they didn't have a pop music experience. Well, certainly that was the scene of the rich who could afford such sociality and the instruments and time to learn how to play them. Today's peoples of any class can while away time spent making music, at least after their work is done, and youthful energy permitting. I suggest it's because of the 'tone' caused by the selected bits that went into it's making.. well yeah. Lotsa thought, and trial and error. An electric guitar is relatively useless without the amplifier, meaning the amplifier *is* 'part of the instrument' and selecting 'amplifier sound' is just as much a part of the total instrument called an 'electric guitar' as deciding whether to make a string banjo or violin, including what wood to use and a host of other 'tone shaping' factors. There, too, the 'body' is a 'tone altering amplifier'. In short, the notion you're apparently operating under, that there is some sort of original 'real' source you simply want to 'accurately' amplify, does not apply. My notion is that there is only so much that can be done to change tone with the tone stacks currently available. My technical brain asseses what the controls are doing, or should be doing, while perhaps a muso just guesses. But if any muso is happy with X, Y and Z setting of the knobs, then that's all that matters. Interesting that you're miffed at tone stacks but apparently think (from your other post) mangling the 'original source' with a reverb is perfectly fine. Well, I feel some tone stacks are just confusing in operation because of the un-predictable outcome of making an adjustment. But reverb is an entirely different matter and involves adding a variable amount of echoes and reverberations to an otherwise boring dry sound. Reverb is like a good sauce on a nice plate of vegetables, or like a slightly revealing dress on a beautiful lady singer. But in this post de-constructionalist age anything goes about artistic definitions. But beauty still remains in the ear of the listener........ For every 1,000 musicians, maybe only one will shine above the others, and he/she might do it all without much reliance on their gear, any old amp might do if they have talent. rather in the same way I expect story lines and character devellopment in movies to be 3 dimensional, or even more dimensional, but clearly told, and preferably without reliance on explosions and special effects. There's no doubt some go overboard with special effect' (effectively being 'the movie') but, hate to burst your bubble, there are explosions and such during a war so, as but one example, if that's your 'story' then simply having '3 dimensional characters' isn't going to cut it. Only a very small percentage of daily possible human drama worth putting up on the silver screen involves continuous huge explosions. Shakespeare showed what was possible in the old days..... But now we have "effects" industries, and anything from Hollywood must be action packed and it mostly bores me ****less to sit through implausible crap produced by a huge team of ppl who just must be used because they exist. Sound in movies is often horrid, with key speach lines spoken by whisperers into a cupboard while noise and music rage in the background/foreground and the plot is routinely made inperceptible by anyone over 30 who does not have the most tenacious hearing capabilities. In other words, the "more" they put into media entertainments becomes less in effect. I once heard Mick Jagger playing a plain guitar and a plain old amp and doing some some Missisippi blues numbers and I thought he really understood the genre. he "had it". Just as good as the old black guys from years ago. No need for much knob twiddling at all - it was a case of less is "more". Mick's 'Roots" album wan't bad. Taj Mahal and Rye Cooder also relied on sheer talent and musicality, and not on the tone settings. Anyway, I would have thought the Ampeg type of tone controls with bass, mid, treble were way ahead of the rest. Some like it and some think it muddy, or have other complaints. There are few musos who would ever agree on anything. They are artists. Consistent opinions are never to be had with artists. But then the basic tone stack which is used in 90% of guitar amps is the product of a mind which asks "how can tone be changed at a minimum cost?" I will never understand why you insist on manufacturing fantasies about things you have no knowledge of. It matters not that you may not understand me. But I repair/modify guitar amps regularly for people and generally get very well received appraisals for my efforts and I get repeat orders. How could I not have in-depth knowledge of guitar amp technology? I put my guitar amp hat on with guitar amp work and my hi-fi hat on for hi-fi amps. The two forms of amps have much in common but also differ in many ways. I would never dream of claiming what "90%" of guitar amplifiers have, or pretend to read minds, but the typical Fender and Marshall have a three knob tone stack, as does my own "Travis Tone." Not surprising since I modeled it from the Marshall tone stack. Well, there is such a thing as the typical tone stack as used in most amps such as Fender and Marshall and a whole pile of others. I have the Groove Tube book with 50+ schematics of many brands and maybe 90% have similar tone stacks. without too much regard for the musicians who might struggle for hours twiddling knobs to get a setting they like, and then as soon as they decide to play at a lower level, they have twiddle more knobs after adjusting levels. Anyway every musician thinks he or she is unique of course and they all have preferences, and they seem to put up with what the accountants worked out for them many years ago. If there is a hell yours would undoubtedly be to spend eternity in a room full of accountants perpetually chanting "we do not do design, we do not do design, we do not do design." Well, accountants design unintentionally ( or intentionally ) because they have to say no to the engineers and marketting ppl or anyone else who wants to invest more detail, weight, quality, whatever into a given product. Somebody has to tell the team there is a limited budget to cover production costs and to make a profit for share holders and to afford the wages of the CEO and his Caddilac. Companies go broke without accountants, or bean counters telling half the team, "NO!!!" on a daily basis. The Ampeg tone controls are much more expensive than the cheap way used by so many other brands. Too bad it sounds muddy. But "muddy" is an artistically subjective thing, and its nature is debatable. Patrick Turner. |
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On Nov 8, 7:21*pm, flipper wrote:
On Sun, 7 Nov 2010 02:02:41 -0800 (PST), Patrick Turner snip, I've never measured the response of a geetah pick up Rather an important oversight if one is going to talk about guitar amplifier tone shaping.. But pickups vary, so there is hardly any reason to measure the response and build the amp around the PU. What happens when a different guitar is used? Methinks one size fits all with simple bass/mid/treble adjust should allow enough tone shaping, short of using graphic eq. Btw, why are you 'screwing up' a nice flat source anyway? Well why would anyone? But the sound is dull and boring if the response is flat. Not when the goal is accurate reproduction of the 'original'. Few musos ever want a purely flat and non distorting amp. They usually want the music warmed with a dash of reverb and some boost to HF - brightness. And the question after a recording session? "What can you guys do to make it sound better?". The engineers realise the muso isn't always happy with the sound of himself singing /playing, and is desperate get the techs to trick it all up with processing so CD sales might be more than 2 pcs. I've heard the guys from recording studios tell me what goes on and just how demanding the majority of talentless wannabes are. Guitar players do like to boost the treble to hell and brighten the sound, and to the extent that the upper HF harmonics are what cause the amp to overload giving "intersteing sounding" IMD products which are different to where LF F are allowed to be so high in amplitude they modulate the HF. But hey, a bit of either will do as long as whatever can be done to alter the sound and uniquify the sound can be done, at least temporarily. Well, there is only so much that can be done with tone controls as we know them without using say 3 tone stacks cascaded, or using some form of digitally generated artifacts and sampling and processing that so many have become reliant upon to try to get more uniqueness than the next guitarist along. And varying volume should have no effect on tone control settings. So much for the ear's frequency response shift at low volumes, eh? I also like musicians to rely on their creativity rather than tone controls or brand of amps to entertain me, The musician has no control over the magnetic pickup characteristics (other than picking one). Probably not. But there's more than one pick up. Because the 'tone' is not only dependant on the pickup but it's location. As I said, the electronics is 'part of the instrument'. Well indeed. One might be forgiven for thinking a graphic eq unit would do more for most musos but their range of F is wide, so bass, mid and treble is all that can be used, lest some wanted F become almost silent and some unwanted F become prominent. The whole business of the electric guitar sound is based around the basically pleasant sound of a plucked string resonating a peice of thin wood of a box with a hole in it. An electric guitar is not a "plucked string resonating a piece of thin wood of a box with a hole in it." That's an acoustic guitar, or a violin, or a banjo (except the body isn't all wood) or a viola, or any number of string instruments, all of which sound different because the 'mechanical amplifier' creates a different 'tone stack'. Jazz guitars with a pair of F holes are hollow-bodied resonant gizmos. Pick ups are used to pick up whatever is the result. Most rock guitars ate solid, so no few additional resonant tone artifacts are generated beyond the many harmonics in the strings. But rock music artists want a lot more excitement than an amlified acoustic guitar; they want the sound of POWER and want their sound to generate awe in the listeners, a sence of urgency, and stress, and the opposite of relaxation, they want conveyed passion, a wild ride. For that you just basically need square waves fed to a speaker, and an over driven tube amp operating in class C during sustained tones does the job best. This passion recipe is carried too far in most "Metal" players, and is mightily boring to most ppl over 30 because it invokes a memory of aimless energy at a time when most have learnt to aim their energy, and they wish to understand lyrics which they wish to be meaningful and without sub-titles, and they want less repititious noise and more line to line diversity. So hence there is actually a wide variety of use for guitar amps between being flat and distortion free and being radically overdriven. You trying to reduce the electric guitar to whatever music you don't happen to like is irrelevant. I like some, and don't like some. I have my reasons. Much rock music is just noise, kids just jerking off and spraying us all with sound that is irksome, sickening, boring, boorish, peurile, etc etc etc. Having said that, a lot of classic old music played on old instruments is all just noise in vain, cluttering our ears and brains with aural junk. I make no apologies for being at ease with the idea that some art is utter crap, and some has something which can be appreciated. Just exactly what is the 'pure, natural, uncorrupted sound' of a vibrating string made of what tensioned over what? Hint: There isn't one. You have asked an exactly good question. A Stradivarius is claimed to sound better than a cheap Chinese knock off, or any other violin for that matter. Why? They're 'technically' the same thing: just strings over wood, and even shaped the same. Well, the Stradi just sounds better to the many people who like the music written for violin by masters such as Bach, Beethoven, Motzart et all. Not so. Well, one major expense involved with becoming a serious classic music musician when one has learnt enough at a music school to stop the audience walking out is the cost of buying a decent instrument. I've seen the young ppl at our local Canberra School Of Music and seen their purchases. Often the entry cost for a "good enough" instrument is 20 grand. Perhaps these folk might disagree with you. The balance of harmonic levels achieved produced by resonant wooden boxes and strings as put together 200 years ago by italian masters is necta to the ears; like the finest of wine to the palete, like the most moving art or sculture is to the eye. If that made any sense then any "resonant wooden boxes and strings as put together 200 years ago by Italian masters" would have the same reputation, but they don't Amoung all things, some things are judged better than others. The music industry afficionardos and cognescenti and glitterati all make the most bitchy touchy egotistical judgements about all things involved in their interest. Not all players singers are the same. The criticisms of everything are merciless.... Maybe one day the Chinese produce better violins than the old Italian masters. Don't hold your breath. I've heard some good electrified vilolins but its rare. So it is with electrified harps and cellos and with added digital effects. The music of the masters of 200 years ago has lasted. It has not been dropped and forgotten. It has of course been used as a basic source for inspiration and composition for works by bands such as the Beatles and where electric guitars were at the forefront. The harpsicord was the popular instrument equivalent of the modern electrified guitar *around which many gathered to sing together as a joie de vie passage of life. Just because ppl didn't have amps in 1750 didn't mean they didn't have a pop music experience. Well, certainly that was the scene of the rich who could afford such sociality and the instruments and time to learn how to play them. Today's peoples of any class can while away time spent making music, at least after their work is done, and youthful energy permitting. Lord only knows that dance through the tulip garden has to do with it. I suggest it's because of the 'tone' caused by the selected bits that went into it's making.. well yeah. Lotsa thought, and trial and error. The point was that all the 'bits' of an instrument contribute to the 'tone' and if you had waited for the next sentence you'd have seen it explain that the amplifier is one of the 'bits' to an "electric" guitar. I agree entirely about the amp being part of the instrument. An electric guitar is relatively useless without the amplifier, meaning the amplifier *is* 'part of the instrument' and selecting 'amplifier sound' is just as much a part of the total instrument called an 'electric guitar' as deciding whether to make a string banjo or violin, including what wood to use and a host of other 'tone shaping' factors. There, too, the 'body' is a 'tone altering amplifier'. In short, the notion you're apparently operating under, that there is some sort of original 'real' source you simply want to 'accurately' amplify, does not apply. My notion is that there is only so much that can be done to change tone with the tone stacks currently available. Maybe that "so much" is the intended "so much." My technical brain asseses what the controls are doing, or should be doing, while perhaps a muso just guesses. I'm suggesting that a 'technical assessment' without 'assessing' the pickup, or any of the other 'tone' elements, and what the 'muso' desires the instrument to sound like is neither technical nor musical. Well, when ya buy a standard Fender/Marshal/Whatever amp, you buy what the makers intended, a generic one size fits all with no customized match between amp and pickups. The amp is a result of techicallity, not any sense of musicality in the designers. The muso amp using tubes is **inherently musical** and there is almost nothing anyone can do to add musicality. Perhaps users may "add musicality" by means of plugging in effects boxes. The trend has been ever more complex front panels with ever more knobs and buttons to press and fewer vacuum tubes and many more opamps. More technical, less musical. But if any muso is happy with X, Y and Z setting of the knobs, then that's all that matters. I'd say someone must be or else the knobs would be different (as, indeed, they are with some preferring the 'sound' of a Marshal or a Fender or whatever amp produces the preferred 'tone'.) Interesting that you're miffed at tone stacks but apparently think (from your other post) mangling the 'original source' with a reverb is perfectly fine. Well, I feel some tone stacks are just confusing in operation because of the un-predictable outcome of making an adjustment. Just because you can't predict it doesn't mean no one can. A lot is doable by trial and error. Suck it and see. Ppl cope. For heaven's sake, it's an electronic circuit. Turn the knob to 10 o'clock and it's going to do the same thing every time. Yes, but the response in many muso amps varies depending on settings of bass/treble settings. It may not matter much. But reverb is an entirely different matter and involves adding a variable amount of echoes and reverberations to an otherwise boring dry sound. Reverb is like a good sauce on a nice plate of vegetables, or like a slightly revealing dress on a beautiful lady singer. I'm tickled to death you like reverb but I've heard plenty of 'non boring sound' without it. So have I. Especially when the local Canberra Orchestra plays a concert without any amps, reverb, and in a good hall. But in this post de-constructionalist age anything goes about artistic definitions. But beauty still remains in the ear of the listener........ For every 1,000 musicians, maybe only one will shine above the others, and he/she might do it all without much reliance on their gear, any old amp might do if they have talent. If they have talent the first thing they'll do is get equipment to match. But talent may overcome the limitations of the instrument. A good craftsman does not blame his tools; he produces excellent results with a minimum of tools. But I agree, most successful musicians spend a good part of their earnings on good enough instruments they can afford. With some musos it matters not what they buy; they just don't have much talent. rather in the same way I expect story lines and character devellopment in movies to be 3 dimensional, or even more dimensional, but clearly told, and preferably without reliance on explosions and special effects. There's no doubt some go overboard with special effect' (effectively being 'the movie') but, hate to burst your bubble, there are explosions and such during a war so, as but one example, if that's your 'story' then simply having '3 dimensional characters' isn't going to cut it. Only a very small percentage of daily Who said anything about 'daily'? Depends..... Patrick Turner. |
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Late at night, by candle light, Patrick Turner
penned this immortal opus: I'e got several old PCs laying around, all still working. I would like to have ONE fitted with a spectral analysis prgram and sound card installed. I do get by on old analog gear but spectral analysis would tell me a whole lot more. I use Visual Analyzer for audio work, downloaded from http://www.sillanumsoft.org/. It's pretty complete, several waveforms, independent adjustments for each channel. Measures frequency, amplitude, FFT, transfer function, and a lot more dependent mostly on your imagination. It does need some twiddling until you get the hang of it, but so does most anything and it didn't take me all that long. On top of all that, it's freeware. I do recommend some protection circuitry, the simplest being a resistor and a couple of inverse-parallel diodes. Since the sound card input impedance is on the lowish side an opamp buffer would be better. - YD. -- Remove HAT if replying by mail. |
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On Nov 10, 4:14*pm, YD wrote:
Late at night, by candle light, Patrick Turner penned this immortal opus: I'e got several old PCs laying around, all still working. I would like to have ONE fitted with a spectral analysis prgram and sound card installed. I do get by on old analog gear but spectral analysis would tell me a whole lot more. I use Visual Analyzer for audio work, downloaded fromhttp://www.sillanumsoft.org/. It's pretty complete, several waveforms, independent adjustments for each channel. Measures frequency, amplitude, FFT, transfer function, and a lot more dependent mostly on your imagination. It does need some twiddling until you get the hang of it, but so does most anything and it didn't take me all that long. On top of all that, it's freeware. I do recommend some protection circuitry, the simplest being a resistor and a couple of inverse-parallel diodes. Since the sound card input impedance is on the lowish side an opamp buffer would be better. Maybe a cathode follower buffer with following R plus diode clamp would be better when working around vacuum tube circuits where one accidental touch of a probe onto +500Vdc could blow the opamp and the sound card and PC right out of its case. Thanks for the link; it appeared to download OK. Patrick Turner. - YD. -- Remove HAT if replying by mail. |
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Late at night, by candle light, Patrick Turner
penned this immortal opus: On Nov 10, 4:14*pm, YD wrote: Late at night, by candle light, Patrick Turner penned this immortal opus: I'e got several old PCs laying around, all still working. I would like to have ONE fitted with a spectral analysis prgram and sound card installed. I do get by on old analog gear but spectral analysis would tell me a whole lot more. I use Visual Analyzer for audio work, downloaded fromhttp://www.sillanumsoft.org/. It's pretty complete, several waveforms, independent adjustments for each channel. Measures frequency, amplitude, FFT, transfer function, and a lot more dependent mostly on your imagination. It does need some twiddling until you get the hang of it, but so does most anything and it didn't take me all that long. On top of all that, it's freeware. I do recommend some protection circuitry, the simplest being a resistor and a couple of inverse-parallel diodes. Since the sound card input impedance is on the lowish side an opamp buffer would be better. Maybe a cathode follower buffer with following R plus diode clamp would be better when working around vacuum tube circuits where one accidental touch of a probe onto +500Vdc could blow the opamp and the sound card and PC right out of its case. Thanks for the link; it appeared to download OK. Hell yeah, whatever works. Talk about mixed technology. The sound card only takes 1Vp-p or something like that so you'll need an input attenuator too. Rip one from a scope schematic and you're set. - YD. -- Remove HAT if replying by mail. |
#17
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On 11/10/10 00:07, Patrick Turner so witilly quipped:
I do recommend some protection circuitry, the simplest being a resistor and a couple of inverse-parallel diodes. Since the sound card input impedance is on the lowish side an opamp buffer would be better. Maybe a cathode follower buffer with following R plus diode clamp would be better when working around vacuum tube circuits where one accidental touch of a probe onto +500Vdc could blow the opamp and the sound card and PC right out of its case. Assuming an 11 meg input Z (switched attenuator?), a series 1 megohm 1/2 W resistor going into a high impedence op-amp with external opposing zeners or reliable internal protection circuitry should work as well. Configured as a voltage follower it should prevent any impedence problems and allow you to use a standard 1x/10x O-scope probe. That'd make a simple breadboard test as well. Heh, this makes me think - I haven't owned a scope for a while, and I have a lot of PCs laying about. I should experiment with an microcontroller chip and see if I can use it for this purpose. |
#18
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On Nov 11, 8:26*pm, Big Bad Bob BigBadBob-at-mrp3-
wrote: On 11/10/10 00:07, Patrick Turner so witilly quipped: I do recommend some protection circuitry, the simplest being a resistor and a couple of inverse-parallel diodes. Since the sound card input impedance is on the lowish side an opamp buffer would be better. Maybe a cathode follower buffer with following R plus diode clamp would be better when working around vacuum tube circuits where one accidental touch of a probe onto +500Vdc could blow the opamp and the sound card and PC right out of its case. Assuming an 11 meg input Z (switched attenuator?), a series 1 megohm 1/2 W resistor going into a high impedence op-amp with external opposing zeners or reliable internal protection circuitry should work as well. Configured as a voltage follower it should prevent any impedence problems and allow you to use a standard 1x/10x O-scope probe. *That'd make a simple breadboard test as well. Heh, this makes me think - I haven't owned a scope for a while, and I have a lot of PCs laying about. *I should experiment with an microcontroller chip and see if I can use it for this purpose. The bother with any buffer between amp-under-test is that the buffer adds its distortion. However, usually a typical 6CG7 CF has very low THD if its output voltage is limited to 1Vrms which should be enough to drive a sound card without frying it, and to allow analysis. If the test signal is hundreds of volts at a tube anode, it can be usually reduced with a resistance divider say 1M : 10k0, giving a 100:1 voltage step down ratio. The 10k can be a 10k pot or switched attenuator and the 1M made up with a few series R to limit the the possibility of excess voltage appearing across resistors, even though Pd is well within the rating. If one has 300Vrms at an anode at +500Vdc, one might also use a 0.22uF x 2,000V rated cap to drive the R divider1,000V. There may be no need for a buffer in this case because the 10k or less offers a low enough source R to drive a sound card. Before I set up a PC to do that spectral analysis stuff, there is much else to be explored and maybe implemented. I am presently playing around with a Gilbert Cell to try to make a better AM sig gene, and for understanding something that should be OK for FM stereo decoding without the old fashioned way using coils and a ring diode de- modulator. The Gilbert Cell has many uses and appears in a lot of electronics, and often without anyone realising just what is there. Apparently, one may be made using 6 triodes, so say 3 x 6DJ8 would do, and not be very complex. But I have digressed away from SE OPT stuff...... Analog electronics was just about all invented before 1970; but how it is implemented continues slightly evolve, or else modern ppl find new ways of using tubes to do what has been done in ICs. Nobody in 1966 might have thought to make a Gilbert cell with 6 triodes but that don't mean one should not give it a try on the grounds that it isd a fascinating puzzle at least. Patrick Turner. |
#19
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On 11/11/10 06:08, Patrick Turner so witilly quipped:
I am presently playing around with a Gilbert Cell heh - you made me google what it is - balanced modulator. Got it. Now you can avoid tuning coils and use crystal filters instead. |
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