I recently added EML 300B tubes to my Beepre and needed to adjust the heater resistor values to get the 5V +/- 4% filament voltage specified by EML.
After installing the EMLs, I measured 9.77V dropped across the filament and the heater resistors to ground, 4.65V across just filament, and 5.12V across the heater resistors (2 X 8R, for an effective R-vale of 4 Ohms). Knowing V and R, I calculated I (current) using Ohm’s law: I = V / R = 5.12V across 4 Ohms = 1.28A Knowing I and voltage dropped across the filament I also calculated the filament resistance: Filament DCR (FIL-r) = 4.65V / 1.28A = 3.63R
Since I wanted 5V of the 9.77V dropped across the filament, that meant I needed 4.77V dropped across the heater resistors (H-r): 4.77V / 1.28A = 3.727R. Using a parallel resistor calculator, I calculated that I needed to add approx. 54R in parallel with the existing heater resistors.
BUT, installing a 47R 50R (which I had on hand) in parallel only got me to approx. 4.86V dropped across the filament! Within spec of +/- 4%, but not that close to 5V (or slightly over as my math would have predicted). Through a process of trial-and-error (without math), I ultimately landed on adding both 47R and 150R 50R in parallel, which gave me 5.055V dropped across the filament. Using the parallel resistor calculator again, this means my actual H-r value was 3.598R 3.565R
This confused me, until I realized that in reducing H-r, current must have increased and that increase could be calculated: 9.77V across revised R-total (FIL-r + H-r) = 9.77/(3.63 + 3.727) = 1.328A
Re-running the math for calculating H-r using 1.328A gets me very close to the R-value that ultimately worked: 4.77V/1.328A = 3.592R
To be even more precise, I figure you could do another iteration by recalculating current using the new H-r value (because in further reducing H-r a bit, current will have crept up a bit).
The above assumes that the 9.77V presented to R-total (Filament R + Heater R) remains constant. I figured that since filament voltage is shunt regulated in the Beepre, this assumption was fairly safe. But I think a similar iterative calculation could be done even if voltage would vary based on R-total – it would just involve more steps.
Does the above make sense, or did I just get lucky with a wrong method?
If the above iterative calculation method is theoretically and mathematically sound, it would make arriving at the final R-value easier, save time/money when ordering resistors, and hopefully cut down on the number times one needs to add/remove resistors.
cheers and thanks,
Derek
[edited to correct some misstated values; I misread my math scribblings]