Why Bleeder Resistors
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Why Bleeder Resistors
Why Bleeder ResistorsFrom ha--(at)--ortel.ca Wed Dec 18 12:45:14 CST 1996 From: henry--(at)--nr.ca (Henry Pasternack) Newsgroups: rec.audio.tubes Subject: Re: Tube amp design notes. Date: 18 Dec 1996 16:25:18 GMT Reply-To: ha--(at)--ortel.ca Andy Moss (enz--(at)--bm.net) wrote: : Henry, you wrote a few messages back about two 10K bleeder resistors in : your tube amplifier. I had mentioned that I found that rather suspect : and you, if I recall, stated it was a generally accepted way of doing : things. : I still don't believe. I would like you to provide some kind of *proof* : to this end. : I think that you may have misunderstood a different design as I can see : no positive benefit to such excessive "bleeding". It reminds me of : "leeching" as being acceptable in medicine years ago. : In short, lay the science on me - not the conjecture..... The output voltage of a choke-input filter is approximately 0.9 times the RMS secondary voltage under load. Unloaded, there is no current flow through the choke, which effectively "disappears". The filter now looks like a capacitor-input, and the output rises to 1.4 times VRMS. To keep the supply under regulation, it is necessary to draw a minimum amount of current from it. Working through the math (which is tedious because you have to do it in the time domain), you end up with a standard equation that states, Imin = VDC / L, where L is given in Henrys. For instance, a 400VDC supply with a 10H choke-input filter requires 40mA of bleed current. In practice, the choke's inductance will rise at low currents, allowing a lower bleed current. There are such things (although they are not common these days) as "swinging chokes" -- chokes designed deliberately to have much higher inductance at low currents than at full load -- intended specifically for choke-input filter applications. I don't have a specific reference handy, but you certainly can find a discussion of all of this in the RDH, the Radio Amateur's Handbook, the RCA Receiving Tube Manual and so on. It's for real, trust me. -Henry -- ATTENTION! Reply to ha--(at)--ortel.ca (henry--(at)--ortel.ca won't work).
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