A
analogman
Guest
I am restoring an older tube short wave radio that contains a selenium
rectifier for the high voltage power supply. I've replaced it with a
silicon diode, however the lower voltage drop of the diode requires an
additional dropping resistor to obtainthe correct voltage.
The problem I'm having now is that when the radio turns on, no current
is drawn from this power supply until the tubes warm up and the output
voltage is initially as high as 160 volts. The audio output tube,
50C5, has a max plate voltage of 150. Does anyone have an idea of how
I can limit the voltage? I've tried 5W zener diodes but the seem to
get quite warm even though are disipating about 2.5 watts.
It's been a while since I worked on this radio and I don't remember
what prompted me to replace the origional selenium rectifier. In any
case, I'm not all that sure it is bad now. I experimented with it and
found it has a voltage drop of about 20v. Does anyone know what a
typical voltage drop should be for these things?
Thanks in advance,
analogman
rectifier for the high voltage power supply. I've replaced it with a
silicon diode, however the lower voltage drop of the diode requires an
additional dropping resistor to obtainthe correct voltage.
The problem I'm having now is that when the radio turns on, no current
is drawn from this power supply until the tubes warm up and the output
voltage is initially as high as 160 volts. The audio output tube,
50C5, has a max plate voltage of 150. Does anyone have an idea of how
I can limit the voltage? I've tried 5W zener diodes but the seem to
get quite warm even though are disipating about 2.5 watts.
It's been a while since I worked on this radio and I don't remember
what prompted me to replace the origional selenium rectifier. In any
case, I'm not all that sure it is bad now. I experimented with it and
found it has a voltage drop of about 20v. Does anyone know what a
typical voltage drop should be for these things?
Thanks in advance,
analogman