I have a transformer with a 3.15v heater tap, is there an effective way to use this so I get 6vAC on both heater lugs of my preamp/power tubes? apparently the 3v isnt enough to light up my indicator light either
Series/Parallel Heater wiring
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beasleybodyshop
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Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Question:
I have a transformer with a 3.15v heater tap, is there an effective way to use this so I get 6vAC on both heater lugs of my preamp/power tubes? apparently the 3v isnt enough to light up my indicator light either

I have a transformer with a 3.15v heater tap, is there an effective way to use this so I get 6vAC on both heater lugs of my preamp/power tubes? apparently the 3v isnt enough to light up my indicator light either
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Stevem
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
You would have to convert that 3.15 vac to dc, and that dc supply would have to be a voltage doubling type to get you over the needed 6.1 volts.
When you use such a power supply you end up with half the amount of current that you started with, so the transformer needs to start off with twice your current needs of your total number of tubes powered.
Do you know the current rating of that PT?
When you use such a power supply you end up with half the amount of current that you started with, so the transformer needs to start off with twice your current needs of your total number of tubes powered.
Do you know the current rating of that PT?
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Not screaming like the passengers in his car!
Cutting out a man's tongue does not mean he’s a liar, but it does show that you fear the truth he might speak about you!
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beasleybodyshop
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
heater tap specs at 4 amps.
so in essence, i need a bridge rectifier and a voltage doubling circuit in series with the heaters?
so in essence, i need a bridge rectifier and a voltage doubling circuit in series with the heaters?
"It's like what Lenin said... you look for the person who will benefit, and, uh, uh..."
Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
3.15v centertap... sounds like you've got a 6.3V filament transformer with a centertap.... i.e. 3.15V per each side of the CT (aka 3.15-0-3.15)
have you powered it up and measured across the two non-centertap leads?
TT
have you powered it up and measured across the two non-centertap leads?
TT
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beasleybodyshop
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
No center tap. It should have one....I received a schematic from Mercury Magnetics (it has one of their PT's in it.) It shows one but it doesn't have one.
"It's like what Lenin said... you look for the person who will benefit, and, uh, uh..."
Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
3.15-0 is a weird voltage. I suspect there is a broken lead that can be repaired. If MM gave you a diagram and you don't see the lead, pursue it with them. They will re-lead it for not very much money if you don't feel comfortable doing it yourself.
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beasleybodyshop
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Sorry, i meant to say that both leads are 3.15v, with no centertap.
"It's like what Lenin said... you look for the person who will benefit, and, uh, uh..."
Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Seems like that tube-heater transformer should supply 6.3V with an artificial center tap?beasleybodyshop wrote:Sorry, i meant to say that both leads are 3.15v, with no centertap.
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beasleybodyshop
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Nick, this is for my Sovtek MIG50 - did yours have a center tap for the heater?NickC wrote:Seems like that tube-heater transformer should supply 6.3V with an artificial center tap?beasleybodyshop wrote:Sorry, i meant to say that both leads are 3.15v, with no centertap.
"It's like what Lenin said... you look for the person who will benefit, and, uh, uh..."
Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
I believe so, but I'll have to confirm tonight after work. I used a replacement PT from Mercury Magnetics, made for modern 120V wall voltage. The original PT was delivering more than 6.3V to the preamp tubes heaters.beasleybodyshop wrote:Nick, this is for my Sovtek MIG50 - did yours have a center tap for the heater?NickC wrote:Seems like that tube-heater transformer should supply 6.3V with an artificial center tap?beasleybodyshop wrote:Sorry, i meant to say that both leads are 3.15v, with no centertap.
I do remember there are separate heater supplies for the noval and octal tubes, with the power tubes getting more voltage than the usual 6.3V. Those two wires are much heavier gauge. They are the heavy gauge brown wires on the original PT secondary.
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beasleybodyshop
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Yeah mine is a MM replacement too. I noticed the brown heater wires gave odd voltages - one wire was 18V, the other was 24V! it was hooked up that way and boy those tubes were glowing reeeeally bright
I figured 4 amp was enough for the whole gamut, so i just used the one heater winding.
"It's like what Lenin said... you look for the person who will benefit, and, uh, uh..."
Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
So, your question is misunderstood...you have 6.3V, and you want 12.6V?beasleybodyshop wrote:Question:
I have a transformer with a 3.15v heater tap, is there an effective way to use this so I get 6vAC on both heater lugs of my preamp/power tubes? apparently the 3v isnt enough to light up my indicator light either
I'm not really clear about your PT. Did you say there are two 6.3V windings and you only used one? If so, you can run the two windings in series. This will give you 12.6V (6.3V on each outer leg) and 6.3V from either outer leg to the splice (CT) for the two windings. Make sure the windings are in phase, otherwise they are bucking each other to 0V. If are running mixed voltage, I don't know what you do about an artificial CT tor real CT for reducing hum.
It strikes me that you can ground the CT you create to get 12.6. Then just pair up the 6.3V tubes for series/parallel wiring so they all work with 12.6.
Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Here's the Mercury PT secondary wire code info:
Red 0V
Red 453V ..... B+
Black 0V
Green/Yellow 67V Bias Supply
Green
White 6.3V Filament heaters (9-pin preamp tubes)
Green
Brown 0V
Brown 7.3V Power Tube heaters
The 9-pin novel tube heater supply has the white wire as the center tap (grounded). The green wires go to the appropriate tube heater pins.
The brown wires provide 7.3V for the power tubes, with no center tap. Phase Inverter tube also gets the higher 7.3V heater supply.
Hope this helps
Red 0V
Red 453V ..... B+
Black 0V
Green/Yellow 67V Bias Supply
Green
White 6.3V Filament heaters (9-pin preamp tubes)
Green
Brown 0V
Brown 7.3V Power Tube heaters
The 9-pin novel tube heater supply has the white wire as the center tap (grounded). The green wires go to the appropriate tube heater pins.
The brown wires provide 7.3V for the power tubes, with no center tap. Phase Inverter tube also gets the higher 7.3V heater supply.
Hope this helps
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Nick,
What's up with 7.3? That's not a typo, seven point three...you typed it more than once.
Phil
What's up with 7.3? That's not a typo, seven point three...you typed it more than once.
Phil
- renshen1957
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Re: Series/Parallel Heater wiring
Hibeasleybodyshop wrote:Question:
I have a transformer with a 3.15v heater tap, is there an effective way to use this so I get 6vAC on both heater lugs of my preamp/power tubes? apparently the 3v isnt enough to light up my indicator light either
Why not a 6ax7 tube for the preamp? We use 12AX7 at the same way wired for 6.3 V, why not use parallel heaters for 6ax7. Might also work for the 6N2 Chinese tubes and the Rusky equivalent.
Just a thought
Best regards,
Steve
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