@testpilot How do you block DC.
Connect two diodes back to back in parallel and insert in hot lead of power cord.
Does anyone care to ask an amplifier designer a technical question? My door is open.
@stargazer3 For the OP what are the pros and cons in relation to damping for amplifiers; eg Hegel store great reliance for damping in relation to driving difficult speakers. There is no con to high damping if done properly. However more than 20 will have little effect and may cause the designer to do some bad things to achieve it. When a designer goes to maximize his favorite parameter he can go too far and other things will suffer. In this case stability from oscillation. There are many amplifiers out there waiting for the wrong load and their own destruction. I have seen many amps with very high damping oscillate into a 0.1 uF load which is typical of some speaker cables. Smoke and shorted output transistors was the result. The cause is too much feedback and assuming that if the amp is ok with the standard 2 uF test load it will be stable with smaller capacitive loads. Many well known amps are not. I tested an early ADCOM that took of with 0.1 uF. I did it for one second. A few more seconds would have been the smoke test. Do you have a link to Hegel, I would like to read it? |
As for the reference to light gauge cords not bringing home the bacon, what gauges are we talking about?18ga for sure- not suitable for larger current draws. The wire gets warm along its entire length with a big enough amp- that suggests its limiting current, and certainly the voltage at the amp will not be that of the wall. Connect two diodes back to back in parallel and insert in hot lead of power cord.The diodes are bypassed by electrolytic capacitors, which conduct only when neither diode is conducting. |
@testpilot. You can purchase this DC blocking board (link below)and populate it or buy one completed at the link below. Great double thick circuit board that is very high quality. The in and out pads accept 12gauge solid core wire which is also nice. Instructions and part lists also on the site. The board is a two layer design in parallel (70um thickness of each) so yes - it can handle current of 20A. The capacitance needed for 1kVA is 22000uf, but since the difference in the price is not big I’d prefer 33000uF. I think the board cost me something like $15-$18 shipped. The parts were only another $20 or so. I use them in my isolation balanced power conditioners. I just built them right into the chassis. They quieted down the toroidal perfectly. Quiet as a mouse now and used to buzzzzz..... Yes, I love my balanced power conditioners and will never take them out as the music simply sounds so much better with them in place. I find them to work wonderfully in many systems. https://www.atlhifi.com/shop/bare-pcb/pcb-for-dc-trap-blocker-filter-for-toroidal-transformers-toroi... |