If you have an HT fuse, which should be a fast blow, using the standby seems to stress them and they often pop, especially true with ss rectifiers. This is annoying as you don't really know if there's a real or developing fault. I'm not sure how Marshalls with internal fuses and SS rectifiers handle the annoyance issue, maybe they use a slow-blow? That's often been my solution though it's lame, plus of course putting the switch btwn the first two nodes, and I put a resistor across it.SilverFox wrote:What about a Semiconductor Diode. I wired my standby between the first node and the HV so there is nothing on the caps when in Standby Mode. It seems as though this will result in a max inrush but that's not supposed to be an issue with semiconductors? Silverfox.
Is there a reason you don't often see a STBY to interrupt the low voltage, say into the PI? I guess you'd still hear some hiss and it wouldn't sell well as a real mute? Plus the risk of oscillation running the extra wiring?
You guys against a standby still recommend this in a ss rectified amp? Seems harsh to just hit a stone cold PS with full power.