So, I need to power the LED's for the front panel on my AC30. I'd like to use some of the "extra" current from my heater tap. The LED's are 3.3VF, 30mA max LED's, in two strings of 5 with (I believe - I can't see any more) 1K current limit resistors, so I need to get the voltage up a bit to run them off of the heater tap.
(I did think about running them off of the mains, but that would take a 5 Watt voltage divider, and I'm not really liking that idea!)
So, the LED's look good at anywhere from about 20-40 mA total (measured), which takes anything from about 20-30 volts (maybe a bit more - honestly, it doesn't change the look much once you get up past about 22mA). So, my figures are that a voltage quadrupler will give me (after diode drops) approximately 23V, (the voltage tripler was only about 18 volts, which isn't quite enough to make the logo look good), and should output about 30mA.
Now, my big question - am I correct in assuming Ohms law holds true and this will then draw 120mA?
None of the sources I can find online seem to talk about the current issues with voltage multipliers, but I need to be a bit careful with my heater tap, since the extra tube (EF86) has already got me up to 5.04A on a 6A tap. 120mA seems fine, but much more and I start eating into any remaining safety margin.
The other option is to put a mains plug inside the amp and find a wall wart that would work, but for a lot of reasons I don't like that idea!
Gabriel