For
Tube-amp builders who want a real Studio: design any tube regulator from spec, simulate, diagnose and export.
You will learn
  • Compare every tube-only regulator topology on a shared bench
  • Master cold-cathode VR physics, stacking and ballast sizing
  • Design series + error-amp regulators with predictable Zout, ripple and stability
  • Diagnose live faults (oscillation, sag, hum, no-strike) with the interactive assistant
  • Export Markdown reports + SPICE netlists wired to Ampera's Koren tube models
Before you start
Power supply & rectification
Time & level
45 minAdvanced

The shared bench baseline

3 min26 min leftPrevNext
Chapter 2 / 83 min

The shared bench baseline

60 Hz / 325 Vrms / LC choke / 50 mA — the reference every calc uses.

Every measurement in this studio is taken on the same bench. If your numbers don't match, it's either your design (the interesting case) or your bench (the boring case). Knowing the reference makes the difference visible.

ConceptBench specification
  • Mains: 60 Hz / 117 Vrms nominal, ±10 % tolerance window.
  • Transformer: 325 Vrms secondary each side of CT.
  • Rectifier: silicon bridge with ~10 V drop (a tube-rectifier variant is also benched).
  • Filter: CLC cap-input (π) — 40 µF / 10 H / 40 µF, choke DCR 100 Ω.
  • Load: 50 mA nominal, swept 10 → 100 mA for load-reg tests.

That yields Vraw ≈ 440 V at the reservoir cap (cap-input, near Vpeak) with roughly 800 mV of 120 Hz ripple on that rail — the reference figure every regulator in the course must attenuate. Every topology is measured against this same upstream — same input, comparable output.

Silicon bridge rectifierFour-diode bridge: D1 and D2 conduct from AC inputs to DC+ rail when their respective AC line is positive; D3 and D4 conduct from DC− rail to AC inputs when their AC line is negative.Silicon bridge rectifier — 4 diodes, ~10 V total dropDC+DC+DC+DC-DC-DC-AC1AC1AC2AC2D1D2D3D4DC+AC1DC+AC2AC1DC-AC2DC-Click to copy "DC+"DC+Click to copy "DC−"DC−Click to copy "AC1"AC1Click to copy "AC2"AC2
Σ DerivationBridge rectifier — from V_rms to V_dc
  1. 1. The instantaneous AC waveform peaks at , related to its rms value by:

  2. 2. After the four diodes, every half-cycle is rectified. The unfiltered DC average is the mean of |sin(ωt)| over a full period:

  3. 3. Two diodes conduct in series per alternation, so the rectifier subtracts twice the single-diode forward drop:

  4. 4. Net unfiltered DC out of the bridge:

  5. 5. Both alternations are folded onto the positive rail, so the ripple frequency is twice the mains frequency:

ConceptCap-input vs choke-input

The bench runs a cap-input CLC: the reservoir cap charges to near Vpeak, so Vraw ≈ 440 V — higher, but with more ripple and harder transformer current pulses. The alternative, choke-input (the inductor first, ahead of any cap), would give a stiffer, flatter 0.9 × Vrms,sec ≈ 280 V but needs Iload ≥ a critical current Icrit — better for high-current power amps. The diagram below shows that choke-input variant.

LC choke-input filterTrue choke-input topology: the 10 H choke is fed directly by the rectifier (no reservoir cap before it) and a single 40 µF reservoir cap follows. Ripple ≈ 1 / (12 · ω² · L · C).LC choke-input filter — 10 H choke + 40 µF reservoirL 10 HL10 HC 40 µF+C40 µFClick to copy "DC+raw"DC+rawClick to copy "DC+"DC+Click to copy "GND"GND
Σ DerivationLC choke-input — V_dc, I_crit, ripple
  1. 1. In true choke-input mode the choke sees the full half-rectified waveform, so the DC output equals the rectifier’s average:

    where V_drops covers bridge diodes plus the choke DCR · I_load.

  2. 2. Choke-input mode only holds while load current exceeds the critical current — below it, the filter slumps to cap-input and V_dc climbs toward V_peak. The classic rule of thumb (60 Hz mains):

    Equivalent form: I_crit [A] ≈ V_rms / (1000 · L). Keep I_load ≥ ~1.5 · I_crit for margin.

  3. 3. Ripple at the input of the LC (≈ half-rectified sine, fundamental at f_ripple) is attenuated by a second-order low-pass. The pk-pk transfer for the dominant harmonic is:

    The factor 12 absorbs the Fourier coefficient of the |sin| waveform plus a √2 rms→pk conversion.

Note
Cap-input filters reach higher Vraw at the cost of ripple, transformer stress, and sensitivity to load current. They're fine for low-current signal stages; for power amps a choke-input is almost always better.
CRC cap-input filterTwo reservoir caps 47 µF / 47 µF separated by a 100 Ω series resistor. Lighter than LC, but the resistor dissipates I² × R.CRC (π) filter — 47 µF / 470 Ω / 47 µFR 100 ΩR100 ΩC1 47 µF+C147 µFC2 47 µF+C247 µFClick to copy "DC+raw"DC+rawClick to copy "DC+"DC+Click to copy "GND"GND
Σ DerivationCRC cap-input — V_dc and ripple
  1. 1. C1 charges to the AC peak through the rectifier on each half-cycle, then discharges roughly linearly into the load between peaks. The DC sits half a ripple below the peak:

  2. 2. Triangle-decay approximation: the reservoir loses charge Q = I_load / f_ripple per cycle, producing a pk-pk ripple on C1 of:

  3. 3. The series R and C2 form a single-pole RC low-pass. The pk-pk attenuation at f_ripple is:

    R also drops a DC component: V_drop,R = I_load · R — and dissipates I²·R as heat.

  4. 4. Final DC at the load:

EU builders: a 50 Hz / 230 V variant of the bench exists. The ripple frequency drops from 120 to 100 Hz, which raises ripple for the same LC. Adjust by larger C2 or a longer choke if the target spec is the same.

Lab · bench-scope
Run →
Bench scope
Click each PSU node (secondary, rectifier, reservoir, Vraw) to see its waveform live on the scope.
Check yourself
The bench is cap-input (CLC). If you drop the load from 50 mA to 5 mA, what changes most about V_raw?
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