At the owners request I installed a SMPS for the filaments. Not a good idea... Maybe because of the cheap crap he bought off of eBay. Terrible noise but he was willing to pay for the experiment.
Next we tried a few bridge rectifiers with a filter cap (lots of different values) then through a dropping resistor. The voltage worked fine at 12v but there was ripple on the scope and of course it sounded bad. I revisited this later and added different caps after the dropping resistor. Still looked bad on the scope.
I pulled that out and subbed in my Astron 13.6v 15A supply... Absolutely flat on the scope and no hum. OK.
I told the customer that the original circuit as it is designed has been just fine for decades now... So I put that in subbing in 1N5402s in place of the selenium rectifiers. I have used these before in similar instances and they have always worked fine. This supplied the 12v but had 60Hz hum... About .35vac. No good. I also tried different cap values and caps at the output... All had about the same results.
Went back to a bridge rectifier with several incarnations of 7812 regulator circuits. Even nastier looking wave on the scope. At least the previous attempts produced near perfect sine waves.
I then tried a couple of different TXs just for the filaments so I could see if separating them from the PT would help... Again, no. Tried 6vdc too... Nopey.
I've been researching DC filament supplies for days and I'm really getting sick of it. I'm seeing 60Hz sine waves in my sleep.
Now that I think about it the largest value of cap I used in any of these configurations was about 2000uF. Maybe I should have tried bigger values. I will have to try that.
HELP!!! Someone please show me the error of my ways! I want to sleep well again soon.
The no-load voltage on the original PT is 22vac. I also rebuilt a 1566A (only two 12AX7s as opposed to three DC supplied in the 1576As) just before this. That one turned out flawless! It's not a proximity issue I've moved the whole supply outside the chassis to prove it. One of the units has a bad winding, I believe. It shows relatively the same no-load voltage but drops off to a little less than 10vdc where the other unit will drop to 12vdc or just below.
If I had hair I would be pulling it out!
Tony