Electronic – What does this power designation/rating mean, and do I need to custom-build a power supply to provide it

power supply

I'll start by saying that I'm a relative self-taught newbie in the electronics world. I recently bought a tube amp kit off of eBay. There were no assembly instructions included, but a very self-explanatory screen on the PCB made it easy to put together.

enter image description here

Power supplies are a gap in my knowledge; I usually just trust the product specs. But this fails my reasonability check, so I was hoping someone else could share their knowledge with me. According to the auction listing, "Power requirement is 60VAC ~ 70VAC 0.2A & 0 – 9VAC 1 ~ 2A."

First, I'd expect it to be an OR, not an AND for the two voltages. Second, when I try to google the power supply specs, I get overrun with results that match 60Hz…not VAC…and sifting through the results for something relevant is challenging at best.

If this isn't a type, I suspect that I may need to create SOMETHING that takes 120VAC in and uses two transformers to output 9VAC and 60VAC. If that's the case, I'd like some references to sites that have examples of "splitting" the power like that so I can research the circuit. I understand how to use a transformer to change 120VAC to X-VAC, but not sure if there are other considerations to get X-VAC and Y-VAC from a single 120VAC source.

If nothing else, it's a great time for me to start learning about power supplies. 🙂

Best Answer

There are two solutions for this problem -

1)Use two transformers - one for 60VAC and other for 9VAC

2)Make a custom transformer having two secondary coils - one for 60VAC and other for 9VAC. This is a single transformer with 2 wires on primary side and 4 wires on secondary side(two for 60VAC and two for 9VAC)

There are solutions for splitting AC. But are costly. Best solution is to use transformers.

I have also faced a similar situation in building audio amplifiers where the power amplifier needs 22V and the filter circuit needs 12 volts and the solution was to build a custom transformer (since 22V was not a standard transformer rating).