1.) Milford, spill beans, please, about that Bottlehead 2A3 kit. You likey?
And 2.)
steve wrote:I will biuld a small power amp. I have a design
I'd be interested in hearing about it, if you have two minutes to type out the particulars.
Moderator: Greg
steve wrote:I will biuld a small power amp. I have a design
Chris G wrote:I'd be interested in hearing about it, if you have two minutes to type out the particulars.
toomanyhelicopters wrote:
and as far as the cables go, i have to say that i've tried interconnects made from Wrigley's Spearmint, Juicy Fruit, you name it. the Big Red provides an unparalled transparency. and the Mouse-Tail speaker cables cannot be beat. it's really the magic spell incorporated by the witch children. but DO NOT let them use rat tails or weasel tails or anything else. it HAS to be mouse tails, in accordance with The Prophecy. otherwise you lose all kinda detail in the 38-45KHz range.
steve wrote:It's more of an educational exercise for me than anything else. I wanted to design an amp without having a schematic or kit or anything to force me to go through all the design restrictions and math, so that I would learn how to do it rather than just making something that someone else did the hard part for.
steve wrote:The VA section is a cathode-biased single 5703 subminiature triode -- excellent bandwidth and about 20V p-p available. The power section couldn't be simpler: a single 6B5 tube. This is an unusual and long-outdated dual-dissimilar triode tube that has its own driver triode internally cathode-coupled to a triode power section. This saves me the trouble of designing as driver, one of the most contentious areas of amplifier design, and one that would surely cause me much hemming and hawing.
steve wrote:The output transformer is a custom Electra-Print. This company was fast and easy to deal with, and I recommend them.
steve wrote:The power supply is a C-L-C Pi filter. Haven't decided whether to use diodes or a couple of 3A3 rectifier tubes I have laying around. I'll probably use diodes on the breadboard until I'm sure everything is working, then try it with the rectifier tubes. I'm a little concerned about the complexity I'll be adding with another filament transformer dust for the PSU, and these tubes were originally intended for high-voltage clipper use, and I don't know how well they'll work as PSU rectifiers.
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