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Pete Millet page 26 Gary Galo page 40 István Béri page 48 Wiring Tips From A Pro Digital Audio Breakthrough “Ultimate” SE Amp Design Volume 12 Number 6 2000 www.audioXpress.com $7.00 CANADA $10.00 BY SATORU KOBAYASHI This article was originally published in Japan’s premier high-end tube magazine, MJ Audio Technology, May 1999. PHOTO 1: The SV300B stereo amplifier. I built this Svetlana SV300B stereo amplifier using Plitron’s single-ended toroidal transformers (designed by Menno van der Veen of Holland). The design includes a high-gain, high-linearity voltage driver circuit, finetuned by simulation (Photo 1). The results showed an excellent power bandwidth: 70kHz at 1W output, and 50kHz even at 10W out. The overall gain characteristic is extremely flat over the full frequency range. The distortion characteristic is also relatively low at 0.5% at 1W, and 3.5% at 10W. The sound from the amplifier brings a wide, deep presence with a JBL S3100 speaker system, allowing me to enjoy to page 9 all kinds of music. (from page 1) DEFINING OPTIMAL LOAD IMPEDANCE Audiophiles have designed many 300B amplifiers to experience the pleasant sound of that tube. There are too many examples published in the audio magazines to choose the best one, however. Even Western Electric delivers considerable 300B data via their website. Therefore, I examined WE300B operating conditions using statistical analysis methods, with a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet (Table 1). As expected, the following tendencies appear: 1) the average output power increases by 2W in proportion to the plate voltage increment of 50V; 2) the distortion stays mostly the same as the supply voltage varies (Fig. 1). When you vary voltages through 350V, 400V, and 450V and vary the load impedance, the power output and distortion will decrease as the load impedance increases. With this information, you can determine the most preferable load impedance from the actual data: 5kΩ is the optimum load at 450V, 3.5kΩ at 400V, and 3kΩ at 350V, respectively (Figs. 2a, b, c). This allows a tentative load-impedance fix of 5kΩ and a plate voltage of 450V for the project. The simulation then gives a grid bias of −105V. From this, you can expect approximately 12W maximum output power. To drive this output stage properly requires design of a driver circuit that can generate 75V RMS (105/√2) with an input level of 0.5V RMS through 1V RMS. DRIVER STAGE The 300B tube needs about −105V grid bias voltage. It requires more attention than the conventional tetrode and/or pentode power tubes, which need a grid bias of only −20 to −50V. A conventional voltage driver circuit usually employs a pentode at the first stage and a triode at the driver stage, with negative feedback adjusting the total gain of the amplifier, as well as an interstage transformer to get a high peak drive voltage. For this project, I determined that a linear circuit producing a high output AC voltage is required. Mark Kelly’s “The ABOUT THE AUTHOR Satoru Kobayashi is from Tokyo, Japan. He has been interested in audio and in ham radio since he was in his teens. After majoring in EE in Tokyo, he joined the semiconductor industry, designing DRAM circuits for a living, although he now works in the technical and marketing area. His debut as a writer came in the early ‘80s in the form of an article about ham radio for CQ magazine. Now he periodically writes on the subject of audio for a few different magazines. Search For Linearity” (GA 6/96, p. 42, 1/97, p. 32) was very useful to me, and allowed me to make a final decision. The article shows a number of high gain and high linearity circuits, such as cascode, mu-follower, SRPP, White cathode follower, and so on. All use a vacuum tube as a current source in place of either cathode or plate resistor, enhancing the gain and linearity. After reading this, instantly I hit upon an idea: If I used one of those, then I could drive a 300B easily and simply without an interstage transformer, and save cost and space. However, such a high-gain amplifier provides a rather high output impedance (a few kΩ to tens of kΩ). Thus, an impedance converter is needed to drive a 300B with a low impedance. A White cathode follower would be a good choice, rather than a standard cathode follower. Once I tentatively selected the circuit type, then I performed a simulation to determine the total gain with available tubes, such as 12AX7, 6189W, 12AU7, and 6FQ7. I used TubeCAD software by GlassWare to calculate parameters such as gain, maximum output voltage, and other figures very quickly, without need- ing to draw load lines on characteristic curves of each tube (Fig. 3). In an SRPP circuit, the voltage gain of a 12AX7 is more than 90, while 6189W yields a gain of less than 60. I have simulated the circuits of the following: standard SRPP, self-biased SRPP (mu-follower), and fixed-bias SRPP. Subsequently, the mu-follower circuit showed the best performance in terms of voltage gain and maximum output saturation voltage (Table 2). The White cathode follower that I chose for the driver stage is improved from the standard cathode follower, by replacing the cathode resistor with an active current source made from a vacuum tube. This structure generates a higher peak voltage output than a conventional cathode follower. To choose the best tube out of my personal stock, which includes types 6189W, 12AU7, and 6FQ7, I conducted more simulations using Tube CAD. The result showed the 6189W to be the lowest output impedance out of three tubes. Also it showed superior power-supply ripple rejection, about 10dB better than the other tubes (Table 3). TABLE 1 WE300B OPERATING EXAMPLES PLATE VOLTAGE GRID BIAS IDLE CURRENT LOAD IMPEDANCE 200 −42 30 2000 200 −39 40 2500 200 −37 50 2500 250 −55 30 2000 250 −55 30 4500 250 −52 40 3000 250 −50 50 2500 250 −48 60 2000 250 −48 60 2700 250 −45 80 1500 300 −65 40 2500 300 −63 50 2000 300 −63 50 3000 300 −61 60 2400 300 −61 60 3400 300 −58 80 1700 350 −76 50 3600 350 −76 50 5000 350 −74 60 2000 350 −74 60 3000 350 −74 60 4000 350 −71 80 2200 400 −91 40 5000 400 −89 50 3000 400 −89 50 4000 400 −87 60 3500 400 −87 60 5000 400 −84 80 2500 450 −104 40 6000 450 −102 50 5000 450 −102 50 6500 450 −100 60 4000 450 −100 60 5500 450 −97 80 2000 450 −97 80 3000 450 −97 80 4500 Source: Western Electric WE300B Technical Note from WE website. OUTPUT HARMONIC 2ND HARMONIC 3RD HARMONIC 3 2.6 2.5 4.9 3.2 4 4.4 4.7 4.1 5 6.7 7.2 6.1 6.6 5.6 7.5 7.8 6.2 10.2 8.3 7 9.6 8.4 11.5 9.4 10.5 8.3 12.5 9.5 10.7 9 12.5 10.1 17.8 14.6 11.5 20 26 30 18 27 26 26 26 30 26 20 21 26 26 30 26 26 30 21 26 30 26 26 21 25 26 30 25 26 27 30 26 30 21 26 31 31 38 45 27 40 36 39 38 45 41 30 29 37 37 44 37 38 45 30 38 44 39 37 31 38 38 46 37 38 39 45 38 44 30 37 45 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 9 OPERATING POINT age of the driver stage to the highest in the circuit; 450V might be adequate in this amplifier. However, this high plate voltage might exceed the heater-to-cathode maximum limit of 200V. In a cascaded pair of triodes encapsulated in a single glass tube, the cathode voltage of the upper tube is about one-half of the supply voltage. Thus, a supply voltage of over 400V may cause problems with this circuit structure. So I chose a 350V plate voltage for simulation purposes, leaving some room G-1478-1 below the tube’s maxiFIGURE 1: WE300B output power and distortion mum rating. characteristics. It became obvious that a mu-follower circuit will generate 250V It is often said that the higher the plate voltage on a tube, the higher the output voltage will be…and the better the linearity. So, I prefer to increase the plate volt- peak-to-peak (pp) output while holding 180V DC at the cathode on this circuit under a 350V DC supply voltage. Although the circuit generates a peak output level of 305V, with the output node swinging from 55V to 305V, the value exceeds the maximum heater-to-cathode voltage easily. To prevent damage from this excess voltage, the heater of the tube must be biased to one-half of the peak output voltage. A 150V heater bias will be adequate for this purpose. After this simulation, I built a prototype circuit whose characteristic I measured with plate supplies of 350V, 400V, and 450V to verify its operation (Figs. 4 and 5). Consequently, I found the following: 1. The maximum output voltage increases in proportion to the plate voltage, and the distortion then decreases. 2. The maximum peak voltage on the 300B, with a 2V RMS signal input, was 325V pp, 356V pp, and 390V pp, respectively. 3. The overall voltage gain was approxi- TABLE 2 SIMULATION RESULT: MU-FOLLOWER DRIVER 2A G-1478-2a 2B G-1478-2b 2C G-1478-2c FIGURE 2A, B, C: WE300B output power and distortion characteristics by plate voltage. 10 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 CIRCUIT SRPP SRPP FIXED BIAS SRPP SELF BIAS SRPP SELF BIAS Tube Plate voltage Plate current Cathode resistor Plate resistor Input resistor Coupling capacitor Gain Cathode voltage (upper unit) Grid voltage (upper unit) Ripple rejection rate Maximum output voltage, peak-to-peak Grid bias Input impedance Output impedance Frequency response—low Frequency response—high Bias resistor 12AX7 350V 1.5mA 10kΩ 10kΩ 100Ω 1µF 93.49 190V ← ← 1mA ← ← ← ← ← 184V ← ← 0.9mA ← ← ← ← 96.06 188V ← 450V ← ← ← ← ← ← 238V 189V 183V 186V 235V −24.1dB −108/ +108V −1.15V 50.1kΩ 3.99kΩ 0.16Hz ← −125/ +125V −1.34V ← ← ← −28.5dB −124/ +125V −1.3V 48.7Ω ← ← ← −173/ +173V −1.8V ← ← ← >1MHz ← ← ← N/A 1.6MΩ/1.8MΩ N/A N/A FIGURE 3: SV300B loading curve by SE Amp CAD simulator. G-1478-3 TABLE 3 SIMULATION RESULT: WHITE CATHODE FOLLOWER TUBE 6189W 6FQ7 12AU7 Plate voltage Plate current Cathode resistor Plate resistor Input resistor Coupling capacitor Gain Cathode voltage (upper unit) Grid voltage (upper unit) Ripple rejection rate Maximum output voltage, peak-to-peak Grid bias Input impedance Output impedance Frequency response—low Frequency response—high 350V 1.6mA 10kΩ 10kΩ 100Ω 1µF 0.98 191V 167V −61.6dB ±157V ← ← ← ← ← ← 0.95 ← 173V −48.6dB ±152V ← ← ← ← ← ← 0.94 ← 168V −45.9dB ±150V −2.06V 5.31MΩ 9.99Ω 1.59Hz >1MHz −6.58V 2.15MΩ 31.1Ω ← ← −7.62V 5.31MΩ 42.4Ω ← ← G-1478-4 FIGURE 4: Input versus output characteristics and distortion of driver stage. TABLE 4 SIMULATION RESULT: FINAL STAGE LOAD IMPEDANCE LOAD IMPEDANCE Ω 5kΩ Plate voltage Idle current Primary resistance Secondary resistance Grid bias Maximum output power, RMS Maximum output voltage, RMS Maximum output current Grid voltage (upper unit) Output impedance Damping factor 2nd harmonic distortion 3rd harmonic distortion 450V 70mA 80Ω 0.1Ω −98.8V 9.53W 8.73V 1.09A 167V 1.8Ω 4.45 2.9% 0.7% Ω 3.5kΩ ← ← 50Ω ← −99.4V 11.6W 9.65V 1.21A 173V 2.24Ω 3.58 6% 2.1% mately 78. 4. The bandwidth at a −3dB level was 60kHz or less at 70V RMS output. The distortion at this output was approximately 1%. With the aforementioned simulation and experiment, the lineup of the driver circuit was fixed, with a 12AX7A for the first stage and a 6189W for the driver stage, using a plate voltage of 400V. I chose the 400V plate voltage because it will generate the maximum output level and hold the cathode-to-heater voltage on the driver tubes under the maximum limit of 200V, given a 150V DC bias at the heater electrode. The maximum output voltage was 250V pp with this circuit at 3.2V pp input, which is at the onset of clipping (Fig. 6). FINAL STAGE To define the final stage operating condition, I used SE Amp CAD software, comparing three different load impedances to determine which one would bring the best performance under simulation. As of today, Plitron offers three suitable models, with primary impedance of 2.5kΩ, 3.5kΩ, and 5kΩ—all suitable for a Ω 2.5kΩ ← ← 40V ← −99.5V 12.7W 10.1V 1.26A 168V 2.72Ω 2.94 10.2% 4.3% G-1478-5 FIGURE 5: Frequency response of driver stage. TABLE 5 FINAL SIMULATION RESULT: OUTPUT STAGE LOAD IMPEDANCE Ω 4.98kΩ Plate voltage Idle current Primary resistance Secondary resistance Grid bias Maximum output power Maximum output voltage, RMS Maximum output current Grid voltage (upper unit) Output impedance Damping factor 2nd harmonic distortion 3rd harmonic distortion 450V 70mA 40Ω 0.1Ω −98.8V 9.53W 8.73V 1.09A 167V 1.8Ω 4.45 2.9% 0.7% 300B SE amplifier. The simulation parameters assumed a 450V plate voltage and a 70mA idle current, which is within the maximum limit with fixed-bias operation for the 300B. Also, the simulator needs the transformer parameters, such as load impedance, secondary wiring resistance, and so on (Table 4). Armed with results from three different models, I gave first priority to lower distortion rather than maximum output power, so the final choice for loading was G-1478-6 FIGURE 6: Driver stage output waveform. 5kΩ. On the other hand, I had already placed the order for 2.5kΩ transformers during the design stage, so I decided to make the primary impedance 5kΩ by connecting the 8Ω load to the 4Ω output tap of the transformer. Afterwards, I did the simulation again, using fully defined parameters for verification (Table 5). The result shows 20% headroom below the maximum plate dissipation of 40W with 70mA of idle current, giving maximum output power of approximately 10W with 3.1% harmonic distortion, at 99V input to the 300B grid. GLASS AUDIO 6/00 11 POWER SUPPLY The power-supply circuit (Fig. 7) does not use the traditional choke transformer to save money and lessen the total weight of the amplifier. Experimental results showed better ripple rejection using a power MOSFET ripple filter than a conventional 10H/200mA choke—the result was 9.4mV RMS ripple voltage riding on the 450V DC supply (Fig. 8). I also installed the final tube-protection circuit, which consists of a 30-second timer relay and a 10kΩ/20W series resistor in the 340V AC line. After turning the amplifier on, the plate voltage idles at approximately 270V DC, holding the 300B tubes in a cutoff state with approximately −100V grid bias for 30 seconds. Then the relay eliminates this resistor, raising the plate voltage to the nominal value of 450V DC. Also, a 0.3A fuse in the plate supply line ensures additional protection of the 300Bs. Negative grid bias was generated with a voltage tripler on the 40V AC tap of the power transformer, plus a 2SC4233 NPN transistor controlled by an IC voltage regulator, the TL783C by Texas Instruments (TL783C Datasheet. Texas Instruments, SVLS036C—Sept. 1981. Revised April 1997). The IC regulator needs only a reference resistor of 82Ω and an extra resistor of 6.8kΩ to achieve the desired voltage, and give a low ripple voltage of only 0.3mV RMS. The output voltage of −105V goes to a series-connected 68V zener diode and 5.6kΩ resistor, so that about 5 to 6mA flows through this resistor. Two potentiometers, connected in parallel to this bleeder, adjust the grid bias to the final tubes independently. This structure prevents excessive idle current when adjusting bias, and it allows use of a small-size potentiometer (since the current flow in the potentiometer is only a couple of mA). A 20kΩ pot brings −68 to −105V to the grid of each 300B tube for adjusting the bias level. I mounted the IC regulator and NPN transistor onto separate heatsinks for cooling. DC switching regulators, of 12V/0.8A and 5V/2A, respectively, power the heaters of all the tubes. The power transformer that I used provides only a single filament winding of 6.3V/6.8A, which is not adequate for the 300B amplifier. At the design stage, only this transformer was available. Plitron has recently introduced a new design of toroidal power transformer for 300B amps, 6900-X0-00 (Fig. 9). I strongly recommend that anyone who wishes to copy this amplifier should try to use this new model, which provides a couple of 12 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 G-1478-7 FIGURE 7: Circuit diagram. 5V/2A windings and 6.3V/3A for heaters, a couple of 325V/0.25A for the plate supply, and even 100V/0.1A for the grid bias supply. The heater of the driver circuit is run from 12.6V DC biased above ground to +150V DC, to lessen the voltage difference from cathode to heater. PARTS G-1478-8 FIGURE 8: Ripple filter I-V characteristic. First of all, I chose the Svetlana SV300B, since a number of audio magazines evaluated this tube and found it to be as good as the WE300B, so the performance of the tube seems to be superior to its name. Also this tube is much less expensive than the WE300B. Furthermore, Svetlana has a new package design for their SV300B that I prefer, with individual data sheets for each tube in a pair, as well as a safe and attractive package for the matched pair. I obtained Plitron transformers via the authorized dealership, Tec-Sol Inc. in Hamamatsu, Japan, who started to carry Plitron in 1999. These transformers were manufactured in Canada, and were originally designed by van der Veen in Holland (Table 6). The power transformer (#754709) provides 340V-0.7A AC at 280W. The output transformer (PAT-3025-SE) features a maximum output power of 13W, defined at the 50% current level over the coresaturation current of 204mA. It implies G-1478-9 FIGURE 9: Plitron 6900-X0-00 transformer pinout diagram. that this transformer can handle enough power. Thus, the transformer is quite heavy—5.4kg. Both transformers need only three round mounting holes in the chassis, compared to conventional E-I-cored transformers requiring a large rectangular hole. The package uses a 2mm thick black polyamide plastic shell. Epoxy plastic encapsulates the bottom. This structure gives a rigid and solid appearance as well. Mounting requires only a ⁵⁄₁₆″, 3¾″ length bolt and nut through a hole in the center of the power transformer, while the output transformer needs only a 1¾″ length, ⁵⁄₁₆″ bolt through a hole in the bottom center of the transformer. The output transformer is encapsulated in a black spun aluminum can, whose surface is black-coated to resemble the traditional Japanese silk fabric for Kimonos, called “Chiri-men.” This gives the transformer a gorgeous appearance. The first-stage driver uses one 12AX7WA and one 6189W by Philips ECG of the US, which I purchased at a vacuum-tube shop in Akihabara, Tokyo. Others come from the parts dealers in Akihabara, the well-known electronics center where hundreds of shops are gathered on Central Street—like Fifth Avenue in New York City—within a half-mile radius. TABLE 6 PLITRON TRANSFORMER CATALOG Primary impedance Secondary impedance Turns ratio Np/Ns (4Ω secondary) −0.1dB frequency range −1dB frequency range −3dB frequency range Nominal power, RMS Full power bandwidth starting at Total primary inductance Primary leakage inductance Effective primary capacitance Saturation primary DC current Total primary resistance Total secondary resistance Tube plate resistance (300B) Insertion loss Q-factor second-order HF rolloff HF rolloff specific frequency Quality factor (Lp/Lsp) Quality decade factor Tuning factor Tuning decade factor Frequency decade factor (note 4) PAT-3050-SE PAT-3035-SE PAT-3025-SE 5060Ω 4 + 8Ω 35.55 12Hz − 20kHz 5Hz − 45kHz 3Hz − 84kHz 13W 20Hz 40H 10mH 1.2nF 143.43mA 80Ω 0.1Ω 0.7kΩ 0.17dB 0.49 134.08kHz 4100 3.6 7.79 0.89 4.5 3490Ω 4 + 8Ω 29.52 16Hz − 21kHz 7Hz − 48kHz 3Hz − 90kHz 13W 20Hz 28H 7mH 1.1nF 172.72mA 50Ω 0.1Ω 0.7kΩ 0.17dB 0.49 142.54kHz 4100 3.6 6.38 0.81 4.41 2490Ω 4 + 8Ω 34.96 23Hz − 22kHz 10Hz − 49kHz 5Hz − 91kHz 13W 20Hz 18H 5.5mH 1nF 204.32mA 40Ω 0.1Ω 0.7kΩ 0.18dB 0.49 147.21kHz 3273 3.52 5.49 0.74 4.26 ASSEMBLY First of all, using my Macintosh G3/ 266MHz and Claris Draw software, I defined the proper chassis size and the parts locations on the chassis (Fig. 10a and Photo 2). In this project, Plitron transformers did not allow a wide variety of layout plans because of its big round shape. So I lined up the transformers in a row along the long axis of the chassis. Consequently, I needed a big chassis: 480 × 240 × 65mm. Then, I chose San-Ei Musen in Akihabara to construct the chassis, which consists of a 1.6mm-thick polished stainless top plate and 1mm-thick steel bottom box, painted with a matching bottom lid, thus giving a good appearance. I assembled the ripple filter with its MOSFET on a 10 × 7.5cm PCB, and mounted the other switching power supplies on 10 × 15cm and 10 × 11cm PCBs with Teflon-insulated pin electrodes for easy internal wiring and maintenance. I also mounted a couple of potentiometers on a PCB to adjust the grid bias. Each 4-pin socket for an SV300B is assembled with a metal plate adapter (Fig. 10b), custom-made by San-Ei Musen. This adapter sets the level of the socket 14 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 FIGURE 10A: Chassis layout. to 30mm beneath the chassis, to make the height of the tubes and other components over the chassis more even. The internal wiring uses a breadboard with turret terminals, the so-called PTPboard (Fig. 11a) from International Audio Group in Tex. I custom-ordered a board to my specs, with terminals placed as I wished, via e-mail, which was extremely convenient. I received my custom board in less than ten working days. Also, the toroidal transformers give some extra room, so this PTP board and the power supplies (Figs. 11b and 11c) neatly fit into this custom-made chassis beneath the transformers. G-1478-10a G-1478-10b FIGURE 10B: 300B socket adapter. Four 9-pin sockets and all components for the driver stage are mounted over this board, allowing me to wire them easily and simply. The parts over the board are symmetrically placed against the centerline of the chassis, to match the wiring topology elsewhere in the circuit (Photos 3 and 4). ADJUSTMENT After assembly, I double-checked the internal wiring. After correcting any PHOTO 2: Overhead view inside the chassis. errors, I turned the power switch on (before inserting the tubes) and monitored the value of grid bias. The grid voltage should be set to −105V or so, by adjusting the potentiometer controls on the PC board. You can perform the adjustment process with any digital multimeter. Then, I turned the switch off, plugged the tubes into their sockets, and turned the switch on again. I checked the heater line voltage, which should be 5V ±0.2V DC and 12.6V ±0.4V DC, respectively. After several minutes warm-up time, I checked the idle current of the output tubes by measuring the voltage drop across a series 1Ω resistor placed between the plate supply and the output transformer. The value must be around 70mV or so. That completes the adjustment. FINE-TUNING AND MEASUREMENT The key area of fine-tuning was in the power supply (Fig. 12). No further finetuning was required on the amplifier part, since the design was verified by experiment and simulation, optimized with the SV300B and Plitron output transformer. After completing the assembly, while working on the aforementioned adjustment process, I turned the amplifier on with a speaker system attached. A loud hum came out of the speaker. Originally I designed a semiconductor DC regulator for the filament/heater supply of the 300B and its driver tubes by using a single 6.3V AC winding. I was confident G-1478-11a FIGURE 11A: PTP terminal board layout. G-1478-11b FIGURE 11B: 450V regulated power supply. 16 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 (to page 20) G-1478-11c FIGURE 11C: 12.6V DC, grid bias regulated power supply. PHOTO 4: Rear of the unit. PHOTO 3: Inside view front to rear. (from page 16) about making a low-ripple DC supply with various IC regulators, thanks to my semiconductor design background. However, using only one 6.3V AC source did not allow for a low-ripple DCregulated supply for the SV300B filaments. I was able to confirm a 5V DC level monitored by a multimeter, which is an adequate level to run SV300Bs, yet the ripple value was about 60mV RMS— even though I added more than 27,000µF in electrolytic capacitors. It was difficult for me to eliminate the ripple voltage. I have checked it out using an oscilloscope and found the ripple value was more than 150mV peak to peak. Thus, I experimented by running the SV300B tubes with my home-brew regulated power supply (variable from 4 to 18V, 10A maximum, 3mV ripple voltage). The experiment showed that residual AC hum voltage at the secondary of the output transformer dropped to 0.2mV. This result changed my mind about using a switching power supply. It was tempting, since these supplies are available in Akihabara at very low cost. After this improvement, the residual noise voltage at the speaker terminals de- FIGURE 13: Input-output characteristic. 20 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 FIGURE 12: Modified power supply circuit for upgrade. G-1478-13 FIGURE 14: Distortion. G-1478-12 G-1478-14 FIGURE 15: Frequency response. G-1478-15 FIGURE 16: Damping factor. creased to 0.5mV in one channel, 0.6mV in the other. Obviously I prefer to use this ripple-less switching power supply, driving 300Bs as well as other tubes. After this tuning, I measured the following characteristics: • Input versus output and distortion (Figs. 13 and 14) The result shows 10W output with 3.5% distortion at an input level of 0.9V RMS. This result corresponds with the simulation results. The sound is very good for a non-NFB amplifier. • Frequency response (Fig. 15) The results showed a good power bandwidth of 70kHz at 1W and 50kHz at 10W. The overall gain characteristic is extremely flat over the full frequency range. • Damping factor (Fig. 16) I used the on-off method at the loading of 8Ω, and applied a 1V RMS output level. The calculated result shows a damping factor of 6, a good value for a non-NFB amplifier. • Waveforms (Fig. 17) The waveforms show a good power bandwidth, with a better square-wave response than that of many conventional amplifiers. The waveform at 100Hz shows less distortion than that of E-I-cored conventional transformers. I observed no overshoot at the transition edges at 1kHz and 10kHz, since the toroidal transformers are well-tuned and well-damped by their inherent design. LISTENING IMPRESSION I brought this amplifier to my old friend who owns JBL S3100 speaker systems, to listen to music and get his impression as well as my own. First of all, I was impressed with the clarity of the sound coming from the speaker. The sound of musical strings, such as cello, violin, gui- 22 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 G-1478-16 MEASUREMENT EQUIPMENT HP 334A audio analyzer Kenwood AG-204D audio generator Trio RA-920 attenuator 8Ω 50W 2 ch. homemade dummy load HP 1746A oscilloscope Fluke 8020A digital multimeter REFERENCES “300B Power Amplifier Kessaku-sen (Design Pool of 300B power amplifier),” Seibun-do Shinkosha (MJ Audio Technology Magazine). WE300 Technical Note, Western Electric/Westrex Co., Atlanta, Ga. Svetlana SV300B Datasheet, Svetlana Electron Devices Inc., Huntsville, Ala. SOURCES G-1478-17 FIGURE 17: Output waveforms (100Hz, 1kHz, 10kHz). tar and so on, impressed me so much that I can draw a picture in my mind of the artists playing their instruments in front of me. The vocal recordings, including Joan Baez, Ella Fitzgerald, and Natalie Cole, sounded light and pure. I could hear even their breathing during each song, thanks to accurate middle-range tone. I checked the low-frequency response with a CD by the Oscar Peterson Trio, We Get Requests, recorded in 1964. I chose “You Look Good To Me” for testing. At the Tec-Sol Inc. Hamamatsu-shi, Wada-cho 514 Shizuoka 435-0016 Japan +81-53-468-1201 FAX +81-53-468-1202 http://www.tec-sol.com/ http://www.plitron.com/ e-mail: [email protected] Svetlana vacuum tubes and Plitron toroidal transformers San-Ei Musen (This business closed as of August 2000.) Chiyoda-ku, Soto-Kanda 1-15-16 Tokyo 101 Japan +81-3-3251-7985 FAX +81-3-3251-2343 Custom made chassis International Audio Group Inc. PO Box 10096 Killeen, TX 76547-8702 Phone/FAX (254) 699-8702 e-mail: [email protected] PTP board Angela Instruments 10830 Guilford Rd., Suite 309 Annapolis Junction, MD 20701 (301) 725-0451 FAX (301) 725-8823 http://www.angela.com/ Angela capacitors beginning, the sound of a triangle was incredibly clear, and subsequent bass lines by Ray Brown came out with great power and control. Also, I could hear Ray whispering as he was swinging. I was really impressed by the sound from this amplifier, my first exposure to the SV300B and to Plitron toroidal transformers. The sound brought me a more realistic presence than I had heard before, with a wider and deeper atmosphere than conventional amplifiers I have built in the past. I have compared the sound of WE300Bs installed in this amp—though I could not find or hear any better improvement on what we got with the SV300Bs. ❖ GLASS AUDIO Encourages reader feedback in the form of letters, queries, and comments. Send correspondence to: Glass Audio Editorial Dept., PO Box 876 Peterborough, NH 03458-0876 FAX (603) 924-9467 E-mail [email protected] Be sure to reference the issue, author, and page number of the article or letter in question; and, if you request a response, please include a self-addressed envelope (or FAX number and E-mail address, as applicable) with a loose stamp or postal coupon. TABLE 7 PARTS LIST AMPLIFIER Vacuum tube Vacuum tube Vacuum tube Power transformer Output transformer Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Zener diode Capacitor Capacitor Electrolytic capacitor Electrolytic capacitor Electrolytic capacitor 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 10 2 4 4 2 4 2 4 2 2 12V—0.8A, 5V—0.7A, 100V AC input 5V—2A, 100V AC input 20kΩ (B) Bourns #3296 2SK719 (NEC) or IRFPC40 (VGS = 600V, Id = 6.8A, Pd = 150W, RDS = 1.2Ω) 2SC4233 (VCBO = 1200V, VCEO = 800V, Ic = 3A, Pc = 60W) TL783C (Texas Instruments) Z6150, 150V 2W, Ishizuka Denshi Z6120, 120V 2W, Ishizuka Denshi Z668, 68V 2W, Ishizuka Denshi 6V 1W, NEC RD-6F 1000V 1A RG4C Shindengen 600V 1A, RH1S Shindengen 82Ω ½W 1kΩ ½W 5.1kΩ 2W 5.6kΩ 2W 6.8kΩ ½W 10kΩ ½W 10kΩ 20W w/bracket 56kΩ 1W 75kΩ 5W 100kΩ ½W 0.1µF 600V, ceramic 47µF 160V 47µF 200V 220µF 350V, Nippon Chemicon 100µF + 100µF 500V, Elna Cerafine 14K431U Matsushita, purchased at Akizuki Denshi OMRON MY-2V 30 sec. w/socket Yoshikawa Kinzoku 17P23 (for 2SC4233) Mizutani 20P25-25 (for TL783C) Mizutani (for MOSFET) w/0.3A fuse Teflon insulated 1 ea. 100 × 150mm, 2 ea. 100 × 75mm, Copper clad epoxy glass t = 1.6mm 1 2 2 1 POWER SUPPLY Switching regulator Switching regulator Potentiometer Power MOSFET Transistor IC regulator Zener diode Zener diode Zener diode Zener diode Diode Diode Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Resistor Capacitor Electrolytic capacitor Electrolytic capacitor Electrolytic capacitor Electrolytic capacitor ZNR Timer relay Heatsink Heatsink Heatsink Fuse holder Pin terminal PCB OTHERS Chassis Socket Socket adapter Socket RCA socket Power switch AC inlet Speaker terminal Pilot lamp Spacer Spacer Spacer Spacer ⁵⁄₁₆″ bolt & nut ⁵⁄₁₆″ bolt 24 GLASS AUDIO 6/00 SV300B (Svetlana) 12AX7 WA (Philips—NOS) 6189W (Philips—NOS) Plitron 754709 or 6900-X0-00 Plitron PAT-3025-SE or PAT-3050-SE 1Ω 1W 100Ω ½W 1kΩ ½W 10kΩ ½W 82kΩ 1W 100kΩ ½W 1MΩ ½W 47V, 3W Toshiba, 3Z47 0.1µF 630V Angela (Solen Equivalent) 1µF 630V Solen 47µF 16V OS capacitor by Sanyo 47µF 160V 47µF 450V tubular 480 × 240 × 65mm stainless-steel top custom made by San-Ei Musen Svetlana SK-4A custom made by San-Ei Musen 9 pin Chuoh-Musen San-Ei Musen 125V 10A w/fuse San-Ei Musen 12V 150mA 10mm long, 3mm dia, brass base, nickel plated 15mm long, 3mm dia, brass base, nickel plated 20mm long, 3mm dia, brass base, nickel plated 30mm long, 3mm dia, brass base, nickel plated 90mm long 32mm long 1 1 4 1 1 2 4 3 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 8 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 2 4 2 1 1 1 1 12 8 4 8 1 2