I don't know what you meant when you said you touched the coupling cap but hopefully it wasn't with your bare fingers.
Hundreds of volts inside the amp looking for a way out, if it happens to be you, it won't be nice.
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
Phil, you are correct in that the mains ground (Earth connection) should have it's own dedicated attachment to the chassis, so the artificial CT should indeed be moved to another location. The reasoning is that the mains ground connection should be very secure, with little to no chance of failure. I don't see how this defeats the isolation of the power transformer, unless you were thinking that the CT was connected to the neutral, or could be through a wiring error outside the amp?Phil_S wrote:Great that you constructed the center tap. Very bad that you joined it to the mains ground. You must move it. Move it anywhere else but there, preferably to it's own spot on the chassis. As I suggested a transformer bolt is OK. One of the ground lugs on a terminal strip is OK, as long as nothing else is there.
The reason you don't want to use the mains ground is that you now have a potential connection between the mains supply and the filament winding. One function of a transformer is to fully isolate the mains supply from the amp's power supply. You've potentially defeated that if something should go wrong. Fix this NOW, please.
Seems like this exercise is filling all of those needs with a zero initial cost, and this amp has some sentimental value to its owner. It's very good preparation for taking on a kit or scratch build, IMO.mcrracer wrote:I still suggest that the OP build a simple SE amp for several reasons
To get a feel for what goes where
To see what parts do what
To get the feel good of making an amp work
To gain some experience
Martin, the problem is a very remote possibility of a short.martin manning wrote:Phil, you are correct in that the mains ground (Earth connection) should have it's own dedicated attachment to the chassis, so the artificial CT should indeed be moved to another location. The reasoning is that the mains ground connection should be very secure, with little to no chance of failure. I don't see how this defeats the isolation of the power transformer, unless you were thinking that the CT was connected to the neutral, or could be through a wiring error outside the amp?