Chassis grounding... one leg of a 6.3V AC tube filament supply?

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systemtruck

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 31, 2023
Messages
158
Location
USA
Hi all,
I’ve noticed sometimes, i suppose mostly in old tube radio/stereo schematics, that a filament output from transformer will have one leg grounded to chassis.
This is pretty different than the standard (seeming) 6.3 AC filament setup where sometimes a ground is created in the middle by adding a pair of resistors or a pot to adjust hum.
One example has BOTH.. this is the Fisher R-20 unit from the late 1950’s, which is a radio and a mono amplifier.
One system of 6.3 filament is dedicated to the audio, and the other is dedicated to the radio section and 3 indicator lamp bulbs. The latter has one leg grounded. Most of the schematic attached below..

Can anyone explain what this does and why it’s done? And what would happen if the bottom leg was NOT grounded? Further more, is there any difference between the two transformer 6.3V output pairs, if all circuits were disconnected?

Thanks so much !

IMG_0735.jpeg
 
Tubes have a maximum heater to cathode voltage specification. If the heaters are left floating then there is no telling how big this voltage might be, not to mention the fact that this will certainly lead to a high level of hum. So there needs to be a dc connection between the filament and 0V (because the cathodes are usually connected via a resistor to 0V) sot he heater to cathode voltage is defined. You can do this by connecting one side of the filament to 0V or by connecting a heater winding centre tap (either actual or virtual (the two resistor method)) to 0V.

Cheers

Ian
 
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