2) what are the purposes of all the 1uF parallel caps at the filter caps?
100-1000µF caps imply they will be aluminum electrolytic caps, due to the cost & size of using anything else.
We expect a capacitor to be a "short-circuit" for high frequencies, but the physical realities of constructing capacitors means that reactance falls as frequency rises (as we expect) up to a point, then it begins rising again. That latter bit indicates some amount of inductance, and means the cap is not a "good capacitor" at some high range of frequencies.
The 1µF caps bypass the large 100-1000µF caps to overcome the inductance of the big caps. It helps make sure the big caps don't oscillate in the radio-frequency range.
Hello, I'm interested in some general feedback and have a couple of questions regarding the attached power supply (2 separate attachments). This is a mic preamp ...
Almost 30 years ago, I bought some custom-built mic preamps that were a pair of
UA 610 preamps packaged in a single rack mount unit. That was before Universal Audio began making those again.
There was a separate power supply chassis that connected to the preamp chassis via a 4-pin XLR cable. In the power supply chassis were 2 linear regulated power supplies: a
250v 100mA supply for B+, and a
12-15v 0.8-1A supply for the heaters of 4x 12A_7 tubes.
If I were to build my own mic preamp today, I would copy that approach: buy off-the-shelf linear regulated power supplies & deal only with how to package them within a finished product.