ruffrecords
Well-known member
JR is right, the PSRR of the circuit being powered is the important factor. Most tube circuits have a very poor PSRR compared to op amps so their supplies need a lot more smoothing. For example, a typical single ended tube output stage might have a PSRR of only 20dB. This means any noise on the HT line will appear at the output just 20dB lower. So. if you want HT noise at the output of the amp to be better than -80dBu for example then the HT ripple must be less that -60dBu or about 1 millivolt. This is just an example. In practice you can achieve lower levels of ripple than this with a three stage RCRCRC circuit.The circuit characterization or specification is called PSRR or Power Supply Rejection Ratio. This quantifies how much power supply ripple (or whatever) shows up in the circuit's output. For op amp circuits the PSRR is typically referred to the input so PSRR reduces the PS ripple noise, and the circuit forward gain amplifies it again.
JR
Cheers
Ian