Are you willing to add a cap and choke before the plate supply?
finally got some time to return to this project... thanks for the suggestion, it was pretty silly of me not to include a choke from the start given my goals!
schematic and final bench pics attached, the blue edits are final tweaks made during testing.
i haven't written in the voltage measurements yet, but they're largely right where i want them to be - filaments about 5% below rated voltage, 60FX5 is at about 4.5W/145V on the plate and 0.75W/120V on the screen, 18GD6A is nice and cool as are all transformers and power dropping resistors - and it turned out sounding really lovely too!! nothing like a simple pentode driving a pentode... and especially with the line out, it's the sort of amp that could function as a pedal in the front of another amp, a preamp driving another power amp, or really sound like a full bodied amp on its own. the CTS speaker goes a really long way towards that... the magnet is so tiny, but the bass response somehow stays so clear even when it's overdriven! is there a typical way folks share audio files on here?
the noise floor is pretty good! but i'd like to get it even better, and i have a lead as to how i might do so, and i was hoping someone might have context for what i've observed.
there's 1.1mV on the output regardless of settings, and i believe it's largely coming from the 60FX5 filaments. adjusting both humdingers made a minor difference, but eliminating the 100R 5W power dropper from the high voltage rectifier made no impact, neither did adding either filament voltage dropping resistor, and neither does wiring position as far as i can tell, or position of mic/guitar to amp, etc. i thought perhaps i needed a lower impedance path to ground for the filament leakage current, so i placed another 4K3 1W in parallel with each existing one, but that actually DOUBLED the size of the noise waveform, to my surprise!
my lead on eliminating the noise, came simply from touching either 60FX5 filament pin with my multimeter probe while in voltage measurement mode - the audible noise dropped by about a third! even better was when i then connected the other multimeter lead to ground - the noise was barely audible even with my ear on the speaker, and the measurement dropped to 0.6mV! results were identical whether i was in AC or DC mode. you can see in the attached scope pictures - the first is with nothing attached, the second is with one multimeter probe attached to one filament pin and you can see a nasty spike being eliminated, and the last is with the other multimeter lead attached to ground and the whole waveform is reduced a bit in amplitude.
i'm pretty puzzled by this phenomenon... it seems perhaps the DC filament will couple less noise into the audio signal, if it has some sort of ground reference attached after the rectifier, rather than before the rectifier?
one possibility is that the DC elevation is messing with the other aspects of the filament circuit, as the roughly 24VDC of elevation is putting one of the filament pins very close to ground, as opposed to being balanced around ground with the other pin. the voltage measurements between the pins, also don't quite match up with the voltage measurements from the pins to ground, so i think the multimeter impedance is messing with the readings... which tracks with it making such a difference in the noise in the first place. here's some relevant voltage measurements:
60FX5 rectifier (+) to (-): 56.8VDC, 2.5VAC
rectifier (+) to ground: 47.9VDC, 6.9VAC
rectifier (-) to ground: 0.6VDC, 6.9VAC
humdinger CT to ground: 23.8VDC
here are my ideas for next things to try:
- reducing DC elevation voltage
- removing humdinger and adding post-rectifier balancing resistors referenced to DC elevation voltage
- removing humdinger and adding post-rectifier balancing resistors referenced to ground
- removing humdinger and attaching negative rectifier output to ground
- removing humdinger and attaching positive rectifier output to DC elevation voltage