I posted recently a great idea to measure noise levels from our power supplies. Yesterday I managed to put together this small interface circuit. I used a remainder piece of double layer PCB big enough to fit the bulky capacitor, the transformer and the output BNC connector. The input is a just a simple set of copper turrets. Special care is taken in laying out the ground planes to avoid ground loops. Also the transformer is grounded at one side only of the case. A finished interface looks like this:
Tag: measure HT supply ripple
HT ripple measurement
Measuring HT supply ripple with your Sound Card
Despite having used the Pete Millett’s SC interface to measure HT supply ripple, it does have a limitation as the input capacitor is rated 400V. Morgan Jones recommends on his latest great “Building Valve Amplifiers” (second edition) three methods for doing this. I opted the one shown above as it does help rejecting common mode noise and also protecting the SC interface. I’m careful enough to not revert the input by accident. If that should happen, the transformer used in this case provides a 500VAC (700VDC) isolation. Normally I play around 400-600V, so should survive in case of misuse. I played with LTSpice to tweak the secondary resistor down to 200Ω when input capacitance is raised to 10μF. Other transformers may allow reducing size of capacitor and increasing resistor up to 10KΩ. I have an OEP E187F at hand so this is what I will use. f-3dB is about 30Hz and provides flat response at 50Hz and 100Hz to measure accurately input ripple.
Will build and report 🙂