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I am going to convert an LF55 to LF25 Platinum to drive my Orion+ tweeters (two tweeters in parallel per side, Zmin=2.5R). I plan to rebuild the amp power supply and would like your ideas on what diodes are best suited for this application. My line voltage is ~117VAC and I will be using 18-0-18 Plitron toroidal xfmrs.Stealth? Schottky??? Others? Many thanks,Peter
What is interesting is that nowhere in the datasheet is switching time discussed. I'd be looking at tns around 25nS, and this figure is available on all the Philips BYQ/V series, but NOT on the Schottkys, which surprised me.
The most important difference between P-N and Schottky diode is reverse recovery time, when the diode switches from non-conducting to conducting state and vice versa. Where in a P-N diode the reverse recovery time can be in the order of hundreds of nanoseconds and less than 100ns for fast diodes, Schottky diodes do not have a recovery time, as there is nothing to recover from. The switching time is ~100 ps for the small signal diodes, and up to tens of nanoseconds for special high-capacity power diodes. With P-N junction switching, there is also a reverse recovery current, which in high-power semiconductors brings increased EMI noise. With Schottky diodes switching instantly with only slight capacitive loading, this is much less of a concern.
FWIW, I've been driving my Orion+ tweeters with a 55N+ for > 6 months to no ill effect. The amount of power the tweeters get under normal program material is so small that I'm not too concerned about overloading the AKSA. Not withstanding the previous comment, I am interested to get your impressions of any sonic advantage gained by converting to LF25.Regards,Mark
Are you doing anything with the LF55s other than lowering supply voltage and changing input cap? I recall that with the AKSA55 N+, there were a few other tweaks required to ensure correct bias with the lower supply voltages.
I would also note that you could easily get away with 0.1uF Sonicap Platinums for a tweeter amp. This would raise the pole from ~8Hz (as supplied by Hugh) to around 36Hz. The influence on the signal at point of crossover (1440Hz) would be minimal, and would cost less than 1/2 the price.
As I understand it, if you don't need the "power" to drive the load then going down in power by reducing the DC rails, enables the amp module to produce much more current at the lower impedances without getting stressed.
Although, yes, one can save money by having different values for C1 ... does having these different C1 values in an active setup introduce undesirable phase changes between low, mid & high amps?