That's a beautifully drawn schematic! Lovely.
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That's a beautifully drawn schematic! Lovely.
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Not really, as far as I can see, all you would need to do is just replace the original +70V power supply with the CD4049 high voltage supply circuit I posted, the rest of the Purgatory Pedal circuit would remain the same, you might need to experiment with the 1N4007 diodes and 33uF/50V caps and see how many of each you need to add to get about a +70V output, the high voltage power supply circuit I posted will actually generate about +45V DC with five 1N4007 diodes and six 33uF/50V caps when powered off a +12V DC supply, so to get about +70V you might need to add maybe three more 1N4007 diodes and 33uF/50V caps to the voltage-multiplier section, I'd breadboard the high voltage power supply first and then tweak it to get +70V out of it.
You might need to substitute a different Mosfet for the 2N7000, maybe an N-Ch Power Mosfet that's capable of running on about 100V or maybe higher, since the 2N7000 is only rated to 60V maximum there's a likelyhood that running it off a +70V supply might destroy it.
Since the N-Ch Mosfet is connected-up in a configuration called a common-source amplifier, or source-follower, it actually produces a voltage-gain of 1, or slightly less than that, what it does do is it converts the high output impedance of the tube's plate/anode to a lower value so there's no loading effects.
If any of you guys manage to build a fully-working version of the modded Purgatory Pedal schematic with the Marshall tone-stack, please post an audio demo of it cause I'm keen to hear what it actually sounds like....cheers in advance.
I'm planning to, depending on availability of parts (and time.) I haven't come across charge pump power supplies before. Would you recommend I go with Lawry's original power supply design, or with the one you've just posted? What are the advantages of the latter? Cheers, Jon
The higher the voltages, the more you'd need to be careful with the wire used, to make sure its insulation was adequately rated. You'd need to use something that had a stated rating, rather than use anything you had lying around of dubious provenance. Some cheap wire is only good for 30v or so.
If you breadboard the circuit first, you could try either of the two high voltage power supply circuits, the main advantage I can think of for the circuit I posted, is that it will run off a DC supply, that means you can also run the tube heater off a DC supply as well, doing so will reduce unwanted hum.