![]() I then calculate the voltage drop needed to get it back down to the nominal voltage. I have installed the new ones, turned the set on and let it warm up, and then measure the current and voltage of the HT (B+ in your case). Modern silicon bridges have less voltage drop across the diodes than selenium ones. Going to half wave rectification will increase the hum. If your set had a bridge, then the capacitors were designed for that. ![]() Using only a single diode in place of a bridge will require the filter capacitors to store enough energy on positive going excursion to last until the next positive going excursion (nearly 34 ms in your case). A single diode will only use one half of the incoming AC, hence it's called half wave rectification. So your 60 Hz incoming AC will be 120 Hz pulsed DC at the output of the bridge. A bridge rectifier on a schematic will be shown as 4 diodes.Ī bridge rectifier will use both excursions of the incoming AC voltage, called full wave rectification. I haven't heard of anyone replacing a selenium bridge with a single diode. Some folks gut the selenium bridge rectifiers and stuff it with 4 modern silicon diodes and capacitors to keep the same look as before. Of the two radios I've worked on with selenium bridge rectifiers (a Grundig and a Telefunken), I've replaced the bridge with silicon bridge rectifiers. My first radios are the kind with out transformers. I plan on getting an ISOLATION transformer and VARIAC to ramp up to safely assure my voltages are OK. I understand that I will need a drop down resistor because of the silicon diodes lower fwd voltage drop. It's clear I don't want a Selenium Diode in my new old radios. I plan on buying some radios, re-cap them, check replace resistors and the SELENIUM DIODE. I know enough about electronics to know to ASK. I have a working knowlege of DC electronics and some RF and audio circuits, but new to tube radios. It looks like it drives the filaments of the tubes? So one diode clips the AC wave to keep it from being noisy? I AM GUESSING? HELP! ![]() I noticed in schematics for old radios they call Capacitors, Condensers. I think it is a term thing I am confused about "Rectifier". I understand it is advantageous to replace the Selenium RECTIFIER which a single Diode (not a rectifier Bridge). ![]()
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