That's what I thought you meant. As I said, this would be a silly thing to do because the amp would sound the same on both settings, but hey, guitarists hear what they want to hear.surfsup wrote: The purpose of the Rs would be to drop the voltage prior to rectification to match the rectified voltage of the tube, so both options SS or Tube would result in the same HV rectified VDC.
I think you made a typo there somewhere. The voltage across a resistor is simply V = IR!As I understand it the Vdrop across each resistor would be:
V = I * X where I is current draw from the amp and X is impedance
The transformer impedance is in series with the diodes in both situations! It contributes to voltage drop all the time! The only thing you're switching is the type of diodes, not the transformer.If i switch out the tube, why would the impedance of the tube be used to calculate the voltage drop across the AC resistor for the SS option? I thought this would be the impedance of the transformer.
Therefore the only extra bit of impedance standing between the transformer and the reservoir capacitor is the resistance of the tube diodes. Therefore, to get the same total voltage loss with the SS diodes you need to add resistors that are equal to the internal resistance of the valve diodes. You can get that from the valve datasheet by estimating the slope of the diode curve.
It is covered in my second book (power supplies, logically enough!) towards the end of chapter 2. Example valve diode resistances are on page 46.I have your book but its not in there either. Hard to find info on AC voltage drop for an amp.