Tube Radio wrote:
So I would need a transformer higher in voltage than 24-0-24 Vac?
Uh, I didn't say that, especially since I didn't know.
My feeling is that if the kit supplier specs a 48VCT 2 A transformer then it will probably work and the current loading math was just an exercise which, after correcting my boo-boos, indicates it can supply the current (as I would hope, since they spec'd it). The other comment was just saying there's 'more to it' if one were designing from scratch.
35 Watt into 8 ohms is the 'worst case' voltage at 16.7V peak. The amplifier topology seems to be bog standard so, as a wild swag, say it needs 3 V bias headroom. That means, under all conditions (low line AC, etc.), the power rail should be at least 20V. Fortunately, 8 Ohms is also the 'lower current' of the two loads and with the 'high current' 4 Ohms peak its only 11.8 V, so the power rails need only maintain 15 V in that case. That means a 5 V 'sag' under maximum load would be perfectly fine.
In theory one might think more voltage would allow more power but the schematic shows they've wisely included an instantaneous current limiter so it's debatable whether it would, or be enough to matter as another 9 Watts would be an imperceptible 1 dB increase and even if we magically turned it into a 50 Watt amplifier that's only 1.6 dB more. It just doesn't matter, except for 'specmanship'.
And, of course, there's my, by now, long standing contention that in any 'real world' use it's never going to be putting out anything close to 35 Watt continuous so this is mainly an exercise to 'pass' an artificial FTC 'continuous Watt' specification that requires line power (for U.S. equipment) during test "shall be" 120 VAC anyway (so line voltage 'sag' is moot).
On the other hand, there's nothing to keep us from making it 'beefier' than 'necessary'.
They also spec ambient at 25C ("at least," so you know it will be 25C) and, frankly, I'd be more concerned with heat because I think it's worse to have the thing burn up on a hot summer day than discover it only does 30 Watt during an AC line sag.
Tube Radio wrote:
I would want maybe 6-7A (if not greater) current capability from the transformer so that I can possibly power a USB port for charging my phone or iPod while it is playing.
I don't know where all those extra amps are going to go.
Tube Radio wrote:
To do the USB port option would require a 5 volt regulator capable of at least 1A of current and I would install a 1A fuse after the regulator then install a 5.1V Zener between the output of the fuse and ground. That way if the regulator shorts and applies full rail voltage it will cause the zener to conduct and blow the fuse thusfore saving my device from over voltage.
IMO you'd be better off picking up a cheap USB power adapter off Ebay because regulating '35 V' down to 5 V 1A is going to burn off 30 Watt and that's a heck of a lot of waste heat just to power 5 Watt worth of USB devices.