I've noticed in a couple of pics, including the one in the wiki portion of this site. that on the Mercury P4550JT-G2 PT, the center taps for both the HT and Heater voltages are tied together and grounded at a common point.
Is this acceptable, or is there a more preferred method?
Thanks.
HT and Heater Center tap grounding
Moderator: VelvetGeorge
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 112
- Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2011 1:56 pm
- Just the numbers in order: 7
- neikeel
- Senior Member
- Posts: 7231
- Joined: Tue Dec 06, 2005 8:31 am
- Location: Suffolk, England
Re: HT and Heater Center tap grounding
Quite normal practise.
Important that the mains has its own dedicated ground and if you want silent running you can follow the 'Larry Grounding Scheme' or SDMs scheme to avoid ground loops.
Important that the mains has its own dedicated ground and if you want silent running you can follow the 'Larry Grounding Scheme' or SDMs scheme to avoid ground loops.
Neil
- joey
- Senior Member
- Posts: 982
- Joined: Thu Aug 20, 2009 10:40 pm
- Just the numbers in order: 7
- Location: Allston, Massachusetts
Re: HT and Heater Center tap grounding
There is no significant current flowing in the CT of the heater supply, so you can ground the CT where convenient. The HT CT however is a different story, and it must be grounded straight to the -negative lug of the DC reservoir cap if you are using two phase, no exceptions.
If you are using Bridge rectification, like in the 100W models, you can either opt out of using the HT CT, and heatshrink it off, or tie it to the junction of the series parallel cap bank used for the DC reservoir like marshall did for equal sharing, and better balance between phases, better than bleeders will provide (however bleeder have the benefit of well creating a discharge path, in this case you can do both and get the best of both worlds.)
If you are using Bridge rectification, like in the 100W models, you can either opt out of using the HT CT, and heatshrink it off, or tie it to the junction of the series parallel cap bank used for the DC reservoir like marshall did for equal sharing, and better balance between phases, better than bleeders will provide (however bleeder have the benefit of well creating a discharge path, in this case you can do both and get the best of both worlds.)