Agreed. The question is how much regulation is needed for proper operation?How much is the current in the microphone going to vary depending on signal level ?
maybe 3% of 1ma with class A ? Our zener doesnt have much work to do to compensate for current in the circuit itself ,
We are not dealing with measurement microphones; a variation of sensitivity of a fraction of dB is not an issue.
So my answer is we don't need regulation, but we need some kind of overvoltage protection.
The higher the current the better the regulation, but one must not exceed max dissipation. For a 75V 1W, current should not exceed 13mA? but it would not make much sense for feeding a load that draws less than 1mA.What I want to know is how to set the bias point for the zener diodes so we make best use of their abillity to regulate any small mains voltage variations ?
That's just about what it actully does. Simulation shows about 225 uA in the zeners, however one must take into account mains voltage variation, zener tolerance (typically 2% or more), xfmr manufacturing tolerances, resistor tolerances.Would it be more effecient to arrange so the zener barely conducts under normal circuit opperation ,maybe 0.1mA ,
That's the case with the current arrangement.and only in the case of mains over voltage does or a disconnected load does it start to dump more current ?