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Posted (edited)

q12 is the current limit. so if the amp board shorts, at least the power supply will not explode.

what do you want me to replace the pzta part with?  remember 20+ma

Edited by kevin gilmore
Posted

I was just pointing out, as how Q12 is connected today, it’s not doing what it is supposed to do. The output should be connected to gate instead.

I remember last time you recommended TTC004B as a replacement for the PZTA42 (different package). We just need something with a flat hfe-Ic curve to, say >100ma at VCE=10V.

Posted

Wow!

But just for my understanding, this is the limit after which damage to earspeakers can occur, right? 

I mean, so much power is really needed to drive the most demanding e-stats? 

Or is it thought as an exercise of pushing it to the boundaries ?

 

Posted

max voltage swing is 4 x bias.  so 580 x 4.  the amp does loose about 20 volts of voltage swing, so 600 is a nice number. same voltage the koss uses. also the rating on the pnp transistor.  could cut the voltage to 550v for a bit more margin.

 

Posted

No.  Given the simple physics that the force of an electrostatic field falls with the square of the distance, it quickly vanishes into background noise before even reaching the skin.  An amp like this would never be run at full tilt, not into Stax compatible drivers at least.  Well past 120dB so permanent hearing damage until they simply burn up.  That means the field is even weaker than that in reality.  

Ideally you'd never want to run the headphones above say 1200-1400Vppss (which is already crazy loud) as depending on the air parameters around you, is could destroy the headphone drivers.  Now there are a lot of variables at play here but a rule of thumb says insulation of air is 3kV/mm and we are running at 0.5mm spacing so 1500V.  I go a bit lower as humidity is a huge factor here and the new Stax drivers appear to be anything but stable so I'd err on the side of caution with them.  I've noticed some very alarming behavior from the X9000 and the 007S so yeah... Stax will never side with you if you have driver damage.  

  • 1 month later...
Posted

Merry Christmas 

I made the output board for D&G and tested it with +/-400V and 845 tubes. Seems to be working as there's 44v across the cathode resistor.

I was planning on using +/-1250V but the C3M mosfet blew up on the circlotronps because 1n4007 diodes aren't rated for that voltage.

sPBipcG.jpeg

  • Like 5
  • Thanks 1
Posted

Test build of Super-Carbon up and running to see what is what: 

sJFA1QB.jpg

PSU angle brackets are recycled from a previous, very tight, build, where those cutouts made perfect sense :)

Two small issues worth mentioning on amp boards. First, TTC004b and PZTA42 have opposite pinouts (ECB vs BCE) so if using TTC004b, transistor front needs to face heat sink. Second, you need to add some current limiting on the CS LEDs if you intend to use them.

Running at +/-550V. 

No listening yet; need to build a more permanent CS supply solution first and also tidy up in general.      

  

  • Like 2
Posted
2 hours ago, MLA said:

Test build of Super-Carbon up and running to see what is what: 

sJFA1QB.jpg

PSU angle brackets are recycled from a previous, very tight, build, where those cutouts made perfect sense :)

Two small issues worth mentioning on amp boards. First, TTC004b and PZTA42 have opposite pinouts (ECB vs BCE) so if using TTC004b, transistor front needs to face heat sink. Second, you need to add some current limiting on the CS LEDs if you intend to use them.

Running at +/-550V. 

No listening yet; need to build a more permanent CS supply solution first and also tidy up in general.      

  

its a new carbon?

 

"kgsshv-carbon board with the 3rd generation sicfets as both current source and gain stages.
+/-400 to +/-600 - probably limit to +/-550" (c)

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, kevin gilmore said:

edit:  current limiting on CS LED???

For some reason, the ones I just put in place blow up when I power on. Standard LTL-4213 ones. When powering up the CS directly to 15V, they make one blink and then they are gone. Slow power on with variac makes them literally blow up, as in into actual pieces. I really don't get it. Maybe the converter is a slow starter? Or I shouldn't be powering up the CS separately.

Edited by MLA
Posted

I think there's no resistor to limit the current so it blows up.

1 minute ago, MLA said:

For some reason, the ones I just put in place blow up when I power on. Standard LTL-4213 ones. When powering up the CS directly to 15V, they make one blink and then they are gone. Slow power on with variac makes them literally blow up, as in into actual pieces. I really don't get it. Maybe the converter is a slow starter? 

 

Posted
27 minutes ago, Omega_ELS said:

its a new carbon?

 

Maybe more like a power up-Carbon :); same design but with higher PSU voltage and new current sources, using current production sicfets. 

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