Thank you - I think designing and amp is a bit like keeping all the plates spinning.
In terms of difficulty, I would say each step is probably 2x the difficulty:
1. designing your own topology/design, and supporting components
2. Using a known topology, and supporting components (but still having to work out the component values)
3. Using a known design with values
4. Using PCB unpopulated (as components you may have vs the designer vary)
5. Using pre-build PCBs as separate components assembled together
6. Buying it
So initially I was trying 2, then to 1, now I'm back to 2/1 (ie switching out the 12AU7 for 12BH7).
The current focus is on the power supply
* EMI choke - filter out the EMI from the mains and prevent EMI going back out.
* Transformer
* inrush protection
* regulation
* current limit
* 'soft' start for the amp.
An A class OTL is at max 50% efficient, and being OTL... that takes a nose drive. With the available non-custom you're looking at 100W transformers, but using a separate transformer for heaters may work out better. Although I can operate the heaters at 6.3 or 12.6V I want to limit the current flowing around the amp - current induces electromagnetic fields thus interference and noise.
Starting an amp in the old days.. literally they used valve rectifiers (with 100+V drop!) and that too a few seconds to ramp up voltage. The down side is bad current handling (sags) and it doesn't like driving large smoothing capactors.
Start up therefore now needs a couple of things in my view to design in extra; some caused by the more hard 'start' of silicon.
* Mute - this is more than a simply noise prevention (whistling etc), as the sim at startup sees a voltage peak of 90V on the rail before the output cap.. which means a spike out to both the headphones and through the feedback hitting the resistor and makes the grid of the front end go positive by about 20V
it's a few milliseconds. The cathode then raises as it biases and the 20V positive, it then gets it's act together.. and it's then stabilises over then next few seconds. So a mute on the input and output would means a clean startup.
* Grid - this needs to be negative to the cathode for the tubes I have on startup.. or the tube will suffer a full power surge.
* Heaters - the euro-tubes can suffer from what looks like a white hot section of element, as the heaters are hit instantly. A cold heater starts at low resistance and then as it heats it reaches it's operating resistance. So that's a high current surge through the heater wire. Not good for the tube, so a small 'soft start' of restricted current will allow the heater filament to handle the current without a surge. Once running the circuit can be switched out.
Inrush
A thermistor works presents a resistance, that resistance causes heat and as it heats the resistance drops and more current flows. Great. However in the scenario that the power is cycled when the thermistor is hot.. you have a full current surge. So I think the way I will do that is have a relay to short the thermistor out once running. That way the thermistor cools and any power cycling will be protected.
* voltage regulation
I'll probably use a mosfet as a voltage regulator, if I need more current then I can use a combination of solid state. If I can get down to the milli-volt ripple I will be happy. The mains power can vary ±10% from 230V, so in an unregulated amp, everything then follows that continuous varying 'float'.
Now in the past I through - more capacitors the better to prevent ripple. Well that works but is a little heavy handed. Valves are VOLTAGE rather than current driven devices, so regulation makes sense and enough capacitance to smooth ripple - and this is a headphone amp!). Little point in having a mass of capacitors if they're slow in providing power. Yes this design is more current focused than normal valve amps (think tens of mA but hundreds of volts) in that each ecc99 triode will drive 60mA max.. which is quite a bit for a small tube (6AS7 and the bigger power tubes will do 110mA+ each triode). I'm essentially using input tubes (12BH7 which is a more current orientated mini-driver but linear) and a driver tube (ecc99) rather than an output tube (the 6AS7 was made to be a power regulator current bypass tube.. but became an audio 'power' tube).
* current limit.
The design originally had a CCS (a current limiter) on the cathodes. That works when the current is only drawn through it - however this an OTL. So there is a link from ground to the cathode - and that is the via the headphones. So you can limit the CCS to 75mA but if you open up the valves (bias etc) there is a scenario where you can draw 3x60mA through the headphones and max out the output tubes causing damage across the board..
Instead I'll install a CCS on the TOP in addition. This means the maximum current being able to be drawn will be limited to 75mA - the bottom ensures a flat load line thus low distortion but the top is simply set as a safety limiter. Only thing is that a IXCP needs about 5V or so to operate - this means the B+ needs to be 155V rather than just 150V.
So the experience I'm looking for is press the power.. let the power button led flash as it starts up (ie going through the steps).. then the power button led goes solid... under the hood there's lots of thinking..