This may not be the best place to float this idea, but restoring Sunn tube amps is where this started for me. So I hope some of you tech guys can assist.
We've all dealt with the issue of modern wall voltage (125 VAC) versus 1960's wall voltage (115 - 117 VAC). This creates higher secondary voltages inside the amp that it was not designed for and places greater strain on the power supply. I've blown current-manufacture can capacitors in several Sunn 200S amps due to the higher wall voltages. This lead me to re-capping Sunn tube amps with discrete caps inside the chassis (totem pole configuration ala Fender for the reservoir caps to withstand the voltage increase). The problem is that you still have higher DC voltages being delivered to every stage of the amp.
One solution is to increase the size of the dropping resistors in the power supply....this requires large wattage resistors to dissipate the heat, especially at the A node. Other approaches include using a Variac (with the attendant heater supply issue) or using an external bucking transformer, or using a high wattage zener diode between the H.T.secondary center-tap and ground.
I was perusing rectifier tubes today and was reminded of the 5R4GB and its variants. The filament voltage, filament current draw and DC output current closely matches the 5AR4/GZ34 typically used in Sunn amps. The benefit is that the DC voltage drop for the 5R4GB is 63 - 67 volts rather than the 5AR4's 10 volts. This goes a long way to compensate for today's higher wall voltage, bringing the rectified DC voltage closer to the original design specs. The only issue I see is that for a capacitor-input filter (typical in Sunn amps), the maximum reservoir capacitor is 20uf for this rectifier tube. My thought is to use a 20uf/600V or better capacitor after the rectifier, then the 1.5 henry Sunn choke, then 40-uf for the A node, dropping resistor with 20uf/600V capacitor for the B node, another dropping resistor with 20uf/600V for the C node.
Does this make sense, or am I missing something?
I have a 60 watt Sunn amp on the bench now and I think I will try this.
Thanks guys!