The theory is that sagging mains causes a dropout voltage condition on the LM1085 regulator, thereby preventing it from properly filtering out AC to the 300B filament. I measured ~12.5V on the Vin of the regulator. Normally, I would get 13.4V. Vout was ~9.8Vdc.
Yes, low line voltage is a problem.
A solution was to use a step up transformer to boost the mains voltage.
If your line voltage moves around a lot, a regenerator is a better solution.
Another was to use a separate filament transformer having greater than 6.3V.
When your line voltage goes back up, the unregulated supply voltage will also increase, and this will increase thermal dissipation in the regulator.
But I'd like to also explore other options. I know the dc filament kit for the Kaiju uses a regulator with a lower dropout voltage than the LM1085. Is there a compatible substitute for the LM1085 with a lower dropout voltage? Would increasing the 33uF bypass capacitor hanging off of the regulator Vin help?
We tried a few lower dropout regulators when developing the BeePre, and we soon discovered that lower dropout seemed to come with increased noise for most regulators. There are two 10,000uF caps in series at Vin already, so taking the 33uF cap up to even 330uF is unlikely to make much of a difference.
I'm also wondering if it is at all possible for the Darlington bipolar transistors (I think that's what they are) to sustain oscillation under these conditions.
Are you talking about the NPN and PNP transistors in the noise filter by the 1085 regulator?