#207397 by
Slacker G
Mon Mar 04, 2013 9:02 pm
Yes. The more capacitance that you have on your voltage supply the better. (Other than the fact that it could fry you if you come into good contact with anything over 100volts., so be extremely careful)
When you install larger filter caps mfd it cleans up the hum. Another things it does is to keep the maximum voltage to the tube plate voltage higher during hard use. When you are driving the amp hard, the rectified voltage is held by the filter caps. Driving the amp hard causes the voltage on the plate to drop. For instance, if the voltage stored in the caps is 450 volts, when you drive it hard it may drop to 420 volts for a short time. A bigger cap (in capacitance) helps to minimize surge voltage drop. In other words when you hit the same note at the same volume for the same duration, the higher capacitance will help maintain the voltage at 450 volts.
The rectifier in your amplifier takes an AC voltage and changes it into a DC voltage. So the cap is really storing DC pulses. Those pulses can't keep up with the heavier load, but with the larger capacity cap, it will maintain the peak voltage longer. A big enough cap will show hardly any drop in the plate supply at the cap terminals. That also quiets the ripple caused by the pulses, so your amp will be quieter in respect to the AC noise. It does not matter how large the cap is in capacitance in the power supply circuit. I always feel the larger capacitance the better. But that also makes it more dangerous when exposed.
The only problem with raising the voltage considerably as you were speaking of before would be the maximum current limit the windings on the primary side of the plate transformer or how much current those windings could maintain. Raising the voltage would also be harder on the plates of the tubes. At one time beam pentodes were mainly used in TV flyback circuitry. In such circuitry you could get 100 watts of SWITCHING out of them. Tube manuals rated tubes in switching mode. In switching mode a tube or transistor requires far less power than in analog mode because during 1/2 of the cycle the tube is off. But analogue power requirements differ greatly since the tube is drawing power the whole time. Therefore you will get about 1/2 of the power in analogue mode.
That is why a Marshall uses two pair of pentodes and a heavily wound primary on the output transformer. Some amps use dual windings, one for each pair of tubes. Hope that helps.
Last edited by Slacker G on Mon Mar 04, 2013 11:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.