Thanks. The amps has no idle current yet and I think it should by now.
Because I have the bulb limiter after the Variac, the voltage measured at my Kill-A-Watt, which is plugged into my Variac, is not the voltage at my amp. I put my multimeter across the AC side of the amp's rectifier and measured 51 VAC. That means all the values I posted previously were not at 90VAC, but 51VAC.
You need to plug the Kill-A-Watt into the mains ahead of the variac.
No voltage across the emitter resistors means it's not operating in class AB. It may be operating in class B with "notch distortion", because that's what class B does.
The emitter resistor of 90 mV is very critical. Guess what, it's controlled by that POT you don't want to move. If you stay below 90 mV the amp should not "BLOW UP" on you. When you go significantly higher than 90 mV, thermal runaway starts.
You need to plug the Kill-A-Watt into the mains ahead of the variac.
Apparently.This leads me to some newbie questions . . . why is idle "current" measured in mV? Are they just giving us the voltage drop to save us from performing the calculation to milliamps?
The idle amps is just the current that the circuit is taking with no load signal.Is the 270mA measured at the Kill-a-Watt indicative of anything? Since we're using a bulb limiter, I imagine this current is meaningful in some way, but there's nothing on the schematic to indicate how much is too much?
Apparently.This leads me to some newbie questions . . . why is idle "current" measured in mV? Are they just giving us the voltage drop to save us from performing the calculation to milliamps?
The idle amps is just the current that the circuit is taking with no load signal.Is the 270mA measured at the Kill-a-Watt indicative of anything? Since we're using a bulb limiter, I imagine this current is meaningful in some way, but there's nothing on the schematic to indicate how much is too much?
Short C13, please. This will disable the bias regulator. Really, it's a good thing to do. With the bias regulator working, this means that some of the output transistors are partially on. It compensates the thermal bias change and different transistor gains. Right now, we want them OFF.
If you Sun draws a half amp at idle, that's about 60W, high but probably normal.
This leads me to some newbie questions . . . why is idle "current" measured in mV? Are they just giving us the voltage drop to save us from performing the calculation to milliamps?
Is the 270mA measured at the Kill-a-Watt indicative of anything? Since we're using a bulb limiter, I imagine this current is meaningful in some way, but there's nothing on the schematic to indicate how much is too much? I know if the bulb glows bright for more than a second, then that's bad -- but I only know that because you guys taught me that.
I used the Kill-a-Watt meter on my 100W Marshall and it draws 220mA. And I tested my Laney HC50 practice amp the same way and it draws 50mA. I realize this isn't the "idle current" of the power amp, but of the entire amp. But I still wonder what it might tell me.
Is there a rule of thumb for how much an idling guitar amplifier should draw from the mains? The Sunn we're working on seems like it'd be drawing 540mA -- half an amp -- at full voltage.
I take this to mean that the amp is behaving the same with or without the bias regulator, and so either the bias needs to be adjusted because of the new output transistors and/or that the bias regulator needs to be swapped out, even though it read good out of circuit?
I still wonder: Could this be responsible for the disparity in the +/- 15v supply?
The servo op amp has a very low frequency response and so does not affect the output in the music frequency range.The Op amp acting as a servo may actually complicate things when trying to do static tests. With a signal, the servo action should really be disabled. You can't have zero output at the speaker terminals when you have music, can you?
The bulb limiter doesn't (and can't) add to the current since it is in series with the amp.
It will subtract some from the amp power, depending upon how much it is lit.
I'm hoping you'll see some asymmetry supporting the IDEA that the -15 supply may be overloaded/
100 W, I think would be too much. I really think 60W is too much.
I remember that both bulbs were half-lit. Ah ha! Then the 60W bulb in my head began to glow all that much brighter. I'm starting to get it. Hence "limiter."
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