Okay so tonight I replaced that resistor that I blew, and also returned the two 100 Ohm to ground on the heater line. The hum seems a lot quieter now, with it biased a bit better. I realized, though, that the bias is a bit too hot. The current is only about 20mV. The tubes expect about 40mV at 70% dissipation, if I'm correct.
Here comes the 'something is wrong' moment. I slowly bring up the bias pot until I get near 40 and about 36 or 37mV it starts humming loudly and the voltage, without me touching it, starts climbing to about 44 or so and I hear that click/pop and I've got the volume down to 0 on the speaker. after that the mv drops to something like 0 or even -5mV and then climbs back up to about 36 or so. If I dial it back just a tad, to about 34, it doesn't seem to do it. I'm guessing it will if I play because that will cause the current to climb (its not class A so it will right?)
Does that mean somethings being overdone in the tubes themselves? I'm wondering if this circuit needs lower voltages? The schematic for the original states the power tubes should be about 450, and mine are about 480, the schematic also calls for much lower voltages on the preamp tubes than what I'm getting, I'll copy/paste from my previous measurements on this thread. Am I just running at a too high of a range for the tubes?
One other thing I'm thinking could also be it. The voltages for the reverb are really hot too, like 400 ish, and I'm guessing that circuit, with the preamp tubes, would do better with something like 150 to 200 V? no?
Do I need to adjust my voltages across the board with a dropping resistor?
Here's what I get on my A-E points:
A: 504V, B: 484V, C: 481V C': 476V, D: 320V, E: 293V
but the amp asks for:
A: 470 B: 450, C: 430, D: 310, E: 270
That means the currently setup 22.5k resistor in R23 (the big 25 Watter Steve found was way too lacking).
may need to be higher to bring voltages down to what's expected. Or do I want to put one inline before A to drop A down to 470 and the rest should just fall in line?
Do I need to put the reverb connections from B and D to something a bit lower? (after adjustments mentioned above). so that they're a lot cooler for that reverb transformer and the circuit in general?
I'm still confused about how I can drop the voltage. I know I need to put in a resistor in series before the A point and that will help drop the Voltage, but I think you need to know the current, is that the sum of currents of the plates for all tubes?
ugh, still a noob at power supply design!
I've been playing with PSU designer but I don't know how to setup a bridged diode like mine has (two of them) so its also odd in that way.
Any input on what's going on? Or are my voltages all 30V too high nothing to worry about?
~Phil