I have done a bit more reading to try to work out any benefit of rectification in the output tube.
Please check what I have summarised below to ensure it is right.
1. AC current feeding the heater of a tube can cause hum because the heater radiates an electromagnetic field
2. By implication, DC current is less likely to cause hum (will not cause hum?)
3. The power tube (eg 6528 in my case, 6080 normally) is a cathode follower. Cathode followers always have a gain (slightly) less than 1. Therefore, any hum arising at this point in the circuit will not be amplified.
4. In the event that hum does result from the use of AC power feeding this tube, it can be reduced by use of a transformer centre tap, an artificial centre tap or DC elevation.
Source:
http://www.valvewizard.co.uk/heater.htmlhttp://www.valvewizard.co.uk/accf.htmlIn view of this, Paul's objection makes perfect sense as the transformer specs to supply the heater of the power tube can be greatly reduced by not converting AC to DC (the process of rectification)
This is what I think I should do:
1. Rectify the input tube (12AU7 et al) using this from Peter Millett
http://www.pmillett.com/LV_reg.html2. Feed this rectifier circuit with a Triad VPS16-5000 transformer. When the secondaries are wired in parallel it will output 8.0V @ 10A (I calculate that the rectifier requires at least 6.326V RMS @ 0.54A so, yes, I have over specified but I think it will work and be cooler as well)
3. Run the 6528 heater directly from the secondary windings (in series) of a Hammond 266PA6, which would supply 6.3 V @ 6A (the 6528 heater requires 6.3V @ 5A)
However......
I have already ordered two of Peter Millett's rectifier PCB and two nice heat sinks that will dissipate 10-15W heat.
So this is what I think I will actually do.....
1. Feed the 12AU7 heater 6.3VDC as noted above
2. Provide the 6528 heater with 6.3VDC via Peter Millett's rectifier circuit
3. Feed the rectifier from a second Triad VPS16-5000 outputting 8.0V @ 10A. To produce the required output voltage of 6.3 V @ 5A, the rectifier requires an input of at least 7.953V @ 9A (according to my calculations). The Triad VPS16-5000 seems to come just within spec.
To have some voltage headroom, I might reduce the heater supply to 6.0 V. This should also have the bonus of slightly extending tube life. Will the resultant reduced emissions degrade sonic performance at all?
The voltage loss across the rectifier is only approx 1.65V, which my heat sink should be able to deal with (up to 15W).
The Triad transformer I have chosen is about $36 AUD per unit.
Do you think my plan will work.
Please give me feedback about the conclusions I have reached. Am I on the right track or barking up the wrong tree?