Saturday, April 4, 2026

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide


Published by IWISTAO

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide 1

1. Introduction — The Legend of the 300B

Of all the vacuum tubes ever made, the Western Electric 300B directly-heated triode (DHT) holds a position of almost mythological reverence in the audio world. Designed in 1938 by Western Electric engineers for telephone repeater amplification, the 300B was never intended as an audio component — yet it turned out to possess sonic qualities that modern semiconductor devices, for all their technical superiority, have never quite replicated.

A well-designed 300B single-ended amplifier delivers 7–10 watts of pure Class A triode power. Those numbers sound modest by modern standards, but wired into a high-efficiency speaker (93 dB/W/m or greater) they produce sound of extraordinary realism — wide, three-dimensional soundstage, natural timbre, and a midrange that makes voices and acoustic instruments feel viscerally present in the room.

"Eight watts of 300B power sounds louder and more alive than forty watts from a typical solid-state amplifier. Efficiency, bandwidth, and the absence of switching distortion change the listening experience completely." — Common observation among SET enthusiasts

This guide keeps the mono schematic as the electrical foundation for each audio path, then expands it into a practical stereo power amplifier. In other words, the left and right channels each use the same 6SN7-to-300B signal chain, while the finished machine adds the duplicated channel hardware, stereo I/O, and a properly uprated shared power supply. The result is this blog  that remains faithful to the original topology while reflecting the parts count and implementation choices of a complete stereo amplifier.

Safety Warning — High Voltage: Vacuum tube amplifiers operate at plate voltages of 300–500 V DC. This is lethal. Before touching any internal components, always switch off, unplug from mains, and discharge all filter capacitors using an insulated bleeder resistor (10 kΩ / 10 W). Verify with a voltmeter before working inside. Build and service these amplifiers only if you have the necessary knowledge and experience.

2. Single-Ended Triode (SET) Theory & Class A Operation

2.1 What Is a Single-Ended Amplifier?

In a single-ended (SE) amplifier, a single output device — in our case, one 300B triode per channel — handles the entire audio waveform. Current flows through this tube continuously and unidirectionally, which is fundamentally different from push-pull designs where two devices share the signal, one amplifying positive half-cycles and the other the negative.

This seemingly simple topology has a profound implication: there is no crossover distortion, and the harmonic distortion spectrum is dominated by the 2nd harmonic — an octave above the fundamental frequency. The human ear is extraordinarily tolerant of 2nd-harmonic distortion; it is the very harmonic structure of most acoustic musical tones. Higher-order odd harmonics (3rd, 5th, 7th), which are far more grating, are essentially absent.

2.2 Class A Operation

The 300B in a SET amplifier operates in Class A throughout. This means the tube is conducting current for 360° of every audio cycle — it never cuts off. The quiescent (idle) current is set high enough that even the largest signal swing never drives the tube to cut-off.

Class A has two consequences:

  • Low distortion — the tube operates over a relatively linear portion of its characteristic curves at all signal levels.
  • Low efficiency — roughly 15–25 % of the DC power drawn from the power supply is converted to audio output power; the rest is dissipated as heat in the tube and output transformer. A 300B running at 350 V / 80 mA dissipates 28 W continuously just sitting idle.

2.3 Why Triode?

Triodes have three elements: cathode, grid, and anode (plate). Unlike pentodes and tetrodes, they have no screen grid or suppressor grid. This simplicity results in:

  • Lower output impedance (higher damping factor for the speaker)
  • More linear transfer characteristics — lower open-loop distortion
  • Smaller phase shift — often allowing the amplifier to be used without global negative feedback
  • The characteristic harmonic signature: primarily 2nd harmonic, falling off rapidly at higher orders

3. 300B Tube Specifications & Operating Points

3.1 Key Parameters of the 300B

ParameterValueNotes
Tube typeDirectly-heated triode (DHT)Cathode = filament wire
Filament voltage5.0 V AC/DCThe uploaded schematic rectifies a 5 VAC winding for the 300B filament supply
Filament current1.2 APer tube; double it only if you build a stereo version of this mono schematic
Max. anode (plate) voltage450 VAbsolute maximum; do not exceed
Max. anode dissipation40 WAbsolute max; design for 70–75% of this
Amplification factor (µ)3.85Low µ = high linearity, low output impedance
Transconductance (gm)~5.5 mA/VAt recommended operating point
Plate resistance (rp)~700 ΩVery low — good damping
Recommended plate voltage300–400 V350 V is a sweet spot for SET
Recommended plate current60–80 mA80 mA gives ~8 W output
Optimal grid bias−65 to −75 VAt 350 V plate, 80 mA operating point
Output impedance~700 ΩReflected as ~4 Ω after 3.5 kΩ : 8 Ω transformer

3.2 Load Line Analysis & Operating Point Selection

Choosing the operating point (Q-point) for a 300B requires drawing a load line on the anode characteristic curves. The load line represents all possible combinations of plate voltage and plate current for a given load resistance (the primary impedance of the output transformer).

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide 2

Figure 1 — 300B anode characteristic curves. The red diagonal load line crosses the family of grid-voltage curves. The red dot marks the recommended Q-point: Va = 350 V, Ia = 80 mA, Vg ≈ −65 V. The output swing is the region between the load line's intercepts.

The load line is drawn from two end-points on the characteristic graph:

  • X-axis intercept (zero current): this equals the B+ supply voltage (e.g. 420 V)
  • Y-axis intercept (zero plate voltage): B+ / RL_primary = 420 / 3500 ≈ 120 mA

The Q-point sits where the load line intersects the Vg = −65 V curve, giving us Va ≈ 350 V and Ia ≈ 80 mA. Maximum undistorted output power is approximately:

Pout = (Vswing²) / (8 × RL) ≈ (280)² / (8 × 3500) ≈ 2.8 W at 1% THD;   ≈ 8 W at clipping

In practice, a well-built 300B SET amplifier delivers 6–8 W with total harmonic distortion (THD) under 2–3% at rated power — dominated by the euphonic 2nd harmonic.

3.3 Which 300B to Buy

The original Western Electric 300B (made in Cicero, Illinois up to 1988, and reissued since 2020) is the reference standard — and priced accordingly. For a first build, excellent modern alternatives include:

BrandCountryCharacterApprox. Price (per pair)
Western Electric (new)USAReference; extended highs, tight bass$800–$1,200
Emission Labs EML300BCzech RepublicHigh-end; warm, extended, extremely long life$600–$900
Takatsuki TA-300BJapanWarm, lush midrange; boutique favourite$700–$1,000
Linlai E-300BChinaExcellent value; detailed, neutral$150–$250
Electro-Harmonix 300BRussia/USABudget-friendly starter tube; reliable$80–$130
JJ 300BSlovakiaRobust, consistent; slightly aggressive$80–$120

4. Circuit Design & Topology

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide 3
Figure 2 — Signal path block diagram of the 300B SET amplifier. Audio flows from RCA input through two gain stages (6SN7), then to the 300B output triode, through the output transformer to the speaker. The power supply feeds all stages independently.

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design and diagram

4.1 Input Stage — 6SN7 Common Cathode

The first stage amplifies the RCA line-level signal and establishes the initial voltage gain for each channel. In the uploaded schematic, one half of a 6SN7 is used as a classic common-cathode stage with a low-value bypassed cathode resistor and a direct connection to the following 6SN7 half. In the stereo amplifier, this entire front end is duplicated once for the left channel and once for the right channel, so the finished chassis uses two identical 6SN7 signal paths.

  • Input attenuator: 100 kΩ volume control at the RCA input
  • Plate resistor: 62 kΩ / 3 W
  • Cathode resistor: 470 Ω / 0.5 W, bypassed with 100 µF / 16 V
  • Interstage connection: direct-coupled to the next 6SN7 half in the schematic, so there is no 0.47 µF coupling capacitor between the two triode sections
  • Typical first-stage plate node shown on the drawing: approximately +70 V
  • Stage role: provide the bulk of the small-signal voltage amplification before the dedicated driver stage

4.2 Driver Stage — RC-Coupled 6SN7 Voltage Amplifier

The second half of the 6SN7 is not drawn as a µ-follower or cascode in this schematic. Instead, it is used as a conventional RC-coupled voltage-amplifier/driver stage. In the stereo build, this stage is simply mirrored for the second channel. That keeps both channels electrically symmetrical and preserves the straightforward behavior of the original drawing while still yielding a true stereo amplifier.

  • Plate resistor: 27 kΩ / 3 W
  • Cathode resistor: 27 kΩ / 3 W, bypassed with 47 µF / 160 V
  • Stage supply node shown on the drawing: approximately +280 V after RC decoupling
  • Typical driver-stage plate node shown on the drawing: approximately +210 V
  • Coupling capacitor to the 300B grid: 0.22 µF
  • Grid leak at the 300B input: 270 kΩ / 0.5 W

4.3 Output Stage — 300B Common Cathode

The 300B is configured as a single-ended common-cathode output stage with a 3 kΩ to 3.5 kΩ primary output transformer as its anode load. In the finished stereo version, one complete 300B output stage is built per channel, so the amplifier uses two 300B tubes and two output transformers. The per-channel values remain those shown on the uploaded schematic: 0.22 µF driver coupling capacitor, 270 kΩ grid leak, 880 Ω / 20 W self-bias resistor, and 100 µF / 160 V cathode bypass capacitor.

Bias Method: Fixed Bias vs. Self Bias

MethodHow It WorksProsCons
Fixed (External) BiasSeparate negative voltage supply sets grid voltage preciselyLower distortion; lower cathode resistance loss; allows trim adjustment per tubeRequires additional bias PSU; tube must be re-biased when replaced
Self Bias (Cathode Resistor)Cathode resistor develops a positive voltage that reverse-biases the gridNo additional PSU; self-adjusting; safer for beginnersCathode resistor wastes voltage and dissipates power; slightly higher distortion

For a first stereo build, self bias is still the most approachable choice, and the uploaded schematic makes that explicit. Using the shown bias target of roughly 70 V at about 80 mA per channel, the cathode resistor works out to Rk = Vbias / Ia = 70 / 0.08 = 875 Ω. The practical schematic value is 880 Ω, with plenty of dissipation margin when implemented as a 20 W resistor on each 300B.

5. The Output Transformer — Heart of the Amplifier

If the 300B tube is the soul of this amplifier, the output transformer (OPT) is its heart. The OPT serves a critical function: it matches the 300B's high-impedance output (~3,500 Ω optimal load) to the speaker's low impedance (typically 8 Ω). Without it, the tube cannot transfer power to the speaker efficiently.

No other single component has a greater influence on the sound quality of a tube amplifier. A mediocre OPT will throttle the bass and smear the high frequencies regardless of how good everything else is. Budget generously for the output transformer.

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide 4

Figure 3 — Output transformer anatomy. The EI silicon-steel lamination core carries the magnetic flux. The intentional air gap prevents DC saturation from the 300B's continuous 80 mA plate current. Primary and secondary windings are interleaved for bandwidth extension.

5.1 Critical Specifications

SpecificationRequired ValueWhy It Matters
Primary impedance3,000–3,500 ΩMust match 300B optimal load for maximum power and linearity
DC current rating≥ 80 mA continuous (100 mA preferred margin)Must carry the 300B's idle current without premature core saturation
Power rating10–15 WComfortable margin above a typical single-ended 300B output level
Low-frequency extension (−3 dB)≤ 20 HzDeep bass reproduction; requires large core and high primary inductance
High-frequency extension (−3 dB)≥ 40 kHzClean transient response; requires low leakage inductance (interleaved winding)
Primary inductance (Lp)≥ 20 H at operating currentLow-frequency limit ≈ Rload / (2π × flow × Lp)
Secondary impedance taps8 Ω, 16 ΩMatches the schematic, which shows 8 Ω and 16 Ω outputs only
Air gapProperly engineeredPrevents DC saturation; too large reduces inductance; too small causes saturation

5.2 Recommended OPT Brands & Models

BrandModelBW (Hz)Notes
Lundahl LL162310 Hz – 80 kHzReference quality; interleaved; excellent for audiophile builds
Hashimoto H-20-3.5S15 Hz – 70 kHzJapanese artisanal winding; highly regarded
Monolith MagneticsUM314 Hz – 60 kHzUK made; good value/performance ratio
Hammond1627SEA20 Hz – 30 kHzBudget-friendly; good starter OPT; choose output taps that match the 8/16 Ω schematic
IWISTAOWVTR-OT300B(8C)20 Hz – 35 kHzAffordable; Amorphous C Type 8C Advanced Core Pr 3.5K Se 0/4/8Ω
Tip — Transformer Orientation: Mount the output transformer and power transformer with their cores at 90° to each other. This minimises mutual inductive coupling between them, which would inject 50/60 Hz hum directly into the audio path. Place the OPT as far from the power transformer as the chassis allows.

6. Power Supply Design

The schematic-aligned amplifier requires three separate supply functions:

  1. High Voltage (B+) — generated from an 800 V CT high-voltage secondary through a 5U4GB rectifier
  2. 300B filament supply — shown as 5 VAC into a bridge rectifier and 22,000 µF reservoir capacitor
  3. 6SN7 heater supply — a conventional 6.3 V AC heater winding
DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide 5

Figure 4 — Power supply schematic showing a 5U4GB rectifier, a 47 µF - 5 H - 47 µF main filter, and an additional 27 kΩ / 3 W + 47 µF / 350 V RC decoupler for the 6SN7 stages. The 300B filament supply is shown separately as a 5 VAC winding feeding a bridge rectifier and a 22,000 µF / 16 V reservoir capacitor.

6.1 High-Voltage B+ Supply

The stereo amplifier keeps the uploaded 5U4GB rectifier topology but scales the finished machine around a shared power supply sized for two channels. One 5U4GB feeds the main B+ rail, and from that rail the left and right audio channels are supplied in parallel. The basic filter remains faithful to the drawing: 47 µF / 500 V first capacitor, 5 H choke, 47 µF / 500 V second capacitor. For a stereo implementation, it is good practice to split the small-signal supply after the main B+ node into separate RC decoupling branches—one for each 6SN7 channel strip—to improve channel separation and prevent one channel's stage current from modulating the other's supply.

  • Rectifier: 1× 5U4GB shared by both channels
  • HV secondary: 800 V CT with higher current capability than the mono version
  • Main filter: 47 µF / 500 V → 5 H choke → 47 µF / 500 V
  • Recommended choke rating for stereo: at least 250 mA, with 300 mA preferred for extra margin
  • Left-channel small-signal branch: 27 kΩ / 3 W + 47 µF / 350 V
  • Right-channel small-signal branch: 27 kΩ / 3 W + 47 µF / 350 V
  • Target decoupled 6SN7 supply node per channel: approximately +280 V, as shown on the schematic

This means the small-signal stages are fed from a quieter RC-filtered branch, while the 300B output stage and output transformer remain tied to the higher-current main B+ rail.

6.2 300B Filament Supply

In the stereo amplifier, the 300B filament supply is expanded channel-by-channel from the uploaded drawing. Each 300B should retain its own dedicated filament rectifier and reservoir capacitor so that the hum balance and filament reference of one output tube do not interfere with the other. The easiest way to remain faithful to the schematic is to build two identical 5 VAC → bridge rectifier → 22,000 µF / 16 V filament supplies, one for the left 300B and one for the right 300B, while the pair of 6SN7 tubes share a suitably rated 6.3 VAC heater winding.

  • Left 300B filament winding: 5 VAC feeding its own bridge rectifier and 22,000 µF / 16 V reservoir capacitor
  • Right 300B filament winding: 5 VAC feeding its own bridge rectifier and 22,000 µF / 16 V reservoir capacitor
  • Hum adjustment: 100 Ω / 2 W balance control per 300B channel
  • Driver heaters: shared 6.3 VAC winding for the two 6SN7 tubes
  • Alternative implementation: two isolated 5 VAC windings or two separately rectified secondary taps are preferred over one shared raw filament supply

6.3 Power Transformer Specification

WindingVoltageCurrentPurpose
Primary120 / 230 V AC (match your mains)Mains input
HV Secondary800 V CT250–300 mA recommended for stereoB+ rectification through one 5U4GB feeding both channels
Rectifier Heater5 Vappropriate for one 5U4GBRectifier filament
300B Filament, Left5 VACat least 1.5 A recommendedLeft-channel 300B filament supply
300B Filament, Right5 VACat least 1.5 A recommendedRight-channel 300B filament supply
6SN7 Heater6.3 VACat least 1.2 A; 2 A preferredBoth 6SN7 driver/input tubes
For a finished stereo machine, the power transformer should be treated as a stereo-spec part rather than a doubled mono estimate. The current requirement is driven mainly by two 300B output stages plus the overhead of the two 6SN7 channels and the rectifier losses. A transformer in the 250–300 mA HV class is a realistic target for this topology.

7. Chassis Layout & Wiring

DIY 300B SET Stereo Amplifier: Circuit Design, Parts List and Step-by-Step Build Guide 6

Figure 5 — Recommended chassis layout (top view). Power components (transformer, choke) are grouped on the right; signal path components (output transformers, tubes) on the left. Keeping these zones separate minimises hum induction.

7.1 Layout Principles

  • Signal zone / Power zone separation: Draw an imaginary line down the chassis. Keep high-voltage power components (mains transformer, choke, rectifier tube) on one side; signal-path components (output transformers, 300B tubes, driver tubes, signal capacitors) on the other.
  • Transformer orientation: Mount the power transformer and output transformers with their core axes at 90° to minimise hum coupling.
  • 300B tubes near their OPTs: Short anode-to-transformer leads reduce stray capacitance and inductance in the high-impedance plate circuit.
  • Input stage tubes furthest from transformers: The 6SN7 input stage is most susceptible to magnetic induction. Mount it as far from the power transformer as practical.
  • Chassis material: 2–3 mm aluminium is standard. Steel provides additional magnetic shielding but is harder to work. Copper and stainless steel are premium options.

7.2 Grounding Strategy

Ground layout is the single most common cause of hum in a DIY tube amplifier. The correct approach is star grounding: all ground return currents flow back to a single point, preventing any current sharing between circuits that would create ground loops.

  1. Establish a single star ground point — typically at the input RCA ground or at a central tag board near the input stage.
  2. All signal ground returns (cathode bypass caps, coupling cap grounds, grid resistors to ground) run as individual wires back to this star point.
  3. Power supply ground (filter capacitor negative terminals, transformer chassis connection) connects to the star via a single low-resistance wire.
  4. The chassis itself is connected to mains safety earth (required by electrical regulations) but is not used as a signal ground conductor.
  5. Use heavy-gauge wire (≥ 1.5 mm²) for high-current grounds (filament returns); lighter wire (0.5–0.75 mm²) is adequate for signal grounds.

7.3 Wiring Materials & Techniques

  • Signal wiring: Screened cable (e.g. Mogami 2524 or Belden 8402 microphone cable) for the input-stage through to the driver stage. Keep signal cable away from mains and filament wiring.
  • HV wiring: PTFE-insulated wire rated ≥ 600 V (e.g. Mil-spec M22759). Red is conventional for B+. Keep HV wire away from signal wire; dress it close to the chassis.
  • Filament wiring: Twist the 5 VAC leads tightly from the transformer to the filament bridge rectifier, and keep the high-current DC filament wiring short between the bridge, the 22,000 µF reservoir capacitor, the hum-balance control, and the 300B socket. Route all heater wiring well away from the input wiring.
  • Construction method: Point-to-point on turret boards or tag strips. For this schematic, keep the high-voltage supply, bridge-rectified filament supply, and the small-signal wiring physically separated to reduce hum coupling.

8. Complete Parts List

Stereo-build note: The quantities in this section expand the uploaded mono schematic into a complete two-channel stereo amplifier. Each channel keeps the original 6SN7-to-300B signal path values, while the finished machine uses a shared rectifier supply, two output transformers, two 300B filament supplies, stereo input/output hardware, and duplicated small-signal RC decoupling.

🔊 Vacuum Tubes

  • 2× 300B output triodes
  • 2× 6SN7 dual triodes (one per channel)
  • 1× 5U4GB rectifier

⚡ Transformers

  • 1× Power transformer with 800 V CT HV secondary rated for stereo current draw, one 5 V rectifier heater winding, two 5 VAC 300B filament windings (or equivalent separate secondary provision), and one 6.3 V heater winding
  • 2× Output transformers, 3,000–3,500 Ω primary : 8/16 Ω secondary
  • 1× Choke, 5 H / 250–300 mA

🗃 Capacitors

  • 2× 0.22 µF coupling capacitors (driver to 300B, one per channel)
  • 2× 100 µF / 16 V cathode-bypass capacitors for the first 6SN7 stage
  • 2× 47 µF / 160 V cathode-bypass capacitors for the second 6SN7 stage
  • 2× 100 µF / 160 V 300B cathode-bypass capacitors
  • 2× 47 µF / 500 V main B+ filter capacitors
  • 2× 47 µF / 350 V 6SN7 supply decoupling capacitors
  • 2× 22,00 µF / 16 V 300B filament reservoir capacitors

🔧 Resistors

  • 2× 62 kΩ / 3 W first-stage 6SN7 plate resistors
  • 2× 470 Ω / 0.5 W first-stage 6SN7 cathode resistors
  • 2× 27 kΩ / 3 W second-stage 6SN7 plate resistors
  • 2× 27 kΩ / 3 W second-stage 6SN7 cathode resistors
  • 2× 27 kΩ / 3 W RC decoupling resistors for the left and right 6SN7 supply branches
  • 2× 270 kΩ / 0.5 W 300B grid-leak resistors
  • 2× 880 Ω / 20 W 300B cathode resistors
  • 2× 100 Ω / 2 W hum-balance controls or equivalent filament-balance parts

🖥 Hardware

  • 2× 4-pin 300B sockets
  • 3× octal sockets (2× 6SN7, 1× 5U4GB)
  • 2× RCA input jacks or one stereo input pair
  • 2× speaker-output terminal sets (left/right)
  • 1× stereo volume control if the amplifier is to include onboard attenuation
  • Chassis, IEC inlet, mains switch, fuse holder, terminal strips, hookup wire, and mounting hardware

🛡 Safety & Extras

  • Bleeder resistors and discharge lead for servicing
  • Heat-shrink tubing, grommets, insulating shoulder washers, cable ties
  • Star-ground hardware and protective-earth connection parts
  • Optional delayed B+ relay or inrush-limiting thermistor, depending on your final implementation

9. Step-by-Step Build Guide

Step 1 — Chassis Preparation

Mark and drill all holes for a complete stereo chassis: two 300B sockets, two 6SN7 sockets, one 5U4GB socket, one power transformer, one choke, two output transformers, stereo input/output connectors, and all filter-capacitor hardware. A mirrored left-right layout helps keep the stereo channels visually and electrically balanced. Deburr all holes and test-fit every major part before wiring.

Step 2 — Install Tube Sockets & Transformers

Mount the tube sockets and transformers with stereo symmetry in mind. Install the power transformer and choke in the power-supply zone; install one output transformer near each 300B socket. Keep the left and right signal paths physically similar, and orient transformer cores at 90° where practical to minimise magnetic coupling.

Step 3 — Build the Power Supply

Wire the shared high-voltage supply first. Connect the mains primary, the 800 V CT high-voltage secondary, and the 5 V rectifier heater winding to the 5U4GB socket. Build the main stereo B+ filter as 47 µF / 500 V → 5 H choke → 47 µF / 500 V, then split the supply into two identical small-signal branches: one 27 kΩ / 3 W + 47 µF / 350 V branch for the left 6SN7 and one for the right 6SN7.

Step 4 — Build the Filament Supplies

Build two 300B filament supplies, one per channel. Each dedicated 5 VAC winding feeds its own bridge rectifier and 22,000 µF / 16 V reservoir capacitor. Install a 100 Ω / 2 W hum-balance control for each 300B filament/cathode network. Wire the shared 6.3 V heater supply to both 6SN7 tubes using twisted pair.

Step 5 — Wire the Output Stage (300B)

Build the left and right 300B output stages as mirror images. Install one 880 Ω / 20 W cathode resistor and one 100 µF / 160 V bypass capacitor per channel. Connect each 300B plate to its own output-transformer primary, feed both primaries from the main B+ node, and wire one 0.22 µF driver coupling capacitor and one 270 kΩ grid-leak resistor to each channel exactly as in the schematic.

Step 6 — Wire the Driver & Input Stages

Wire the left and right 6SN7 stages using identical lead dress and grounding practice. Each channel uses one 6SN7 with the original schematic values: 62 kΩ / 470 Ω / 100 µF in the first half, and 27 kΩ / 27 kΩ / 47 µF in the second half. Keep the two channel strips physically separate until they meet at the chosen grounding and power-supply nodes.

Step 7 — Connect the Star Ground

Bring the power-supply returns, speaker returns, and the two channel signal grounds together in a disciplined single-point grounding scheme. Do not let the left and right channels wander across the chassis independently; join them deliberately at the designed ground reference while keeping high-current charging paths away from the sensitive input circuitry.

Step 8 — Final Inspection & First Power-On

Before applying power, verify left and right channel wiring independently as well as the shared supply. Check both 300B bias networks, both filament supplies, both output-transformer primary/secondary connections, both 6SN7 RC supply branches, and the shared 5U4GB rectifier wiring. On first start-up, measure the main B+ rail and then compare left and right channel stage voltages to confirm that the stereo amplifier is balanced.

10. Biasing & Initial Set-Up

With the stereo amplifier powered on and the supply voltages stabilized, the next step is to verify that the left and right channels are operating at closely matched working points. Because both channels share one rectified B+ supply but have their own self-bias networks, the bias check should confirm both absolute operating values and channel-to-channel consistency.

10.1 Measuring the Bias Current (Self Bias)

Measure the voltage across each 880 Ω cathode resistor. The cathode current for each channel is approximately: Ik = Vk / 880. For example, if you measure about 70 V on one channel, the current is 70 / 880 = 79.5 mA. Repeat the measurement on the other channel and compare the two results.

Also verify the decoupled driver-supply node on both channels and compare the stage voltages with the annotations on the drawing. Because this is a self-biased 300B stage, remember that plate dissipation should be estimated from the plate-to-cathode voltage, not merely from plate-to-ground voltage.

A reasonable stereo target is to have both channels land in the same operating window, typically about 75–85 mA per 300B if the finished power supply is sized correctly. If one side differs substantially from the other, inspect wiring, component tolerance, and filament-reference balance before changing resistor values.

10.2 Measuring Plate Voltage

Measure the voltage between each 300B anode (plate) pin and chassis ground. In a correctly built stereo amplifier based on this topology, the two channels should be close to one another under load. A typical target is roughly 330–380 V plate-to-ground, then use the measured cathode voltage to determine the effective plate-to-cathode voltage for dissipation calculations. Keep the operating point comfortably below the 300B maximum anode dissipation.

Wait for thermal stabilisation: Allow the amplifier to run for at least 20–30 minutes before taking final bias measurements. The 300B's operating point drifts as components reach thermal equilibrium. Re-check bias after 30 minutes and fine-tune if necessary.

10.3 Hum Adjustment

Adjust the left and right filament-balance controls separately for minimum audible hum at each speaker with no input signal. In a stereo machine, hum should be checked per channel because filament balance, grounding, and transformer orientation can affect the two sides differently.

11. Sound Character & Speaker Matching

11.1 What to Expect Sonically

A well-built 300B amplifier has a distinctive and immediately recognisable sound character. The midrange is the standout quality: voices, strings, woodwinds, and pianos reproduce with a natural warmth and harmonic richness that is difficult to describe but impossible to forget once heard. The soundstage is wide and deep, with excellent instrument placement.

The low end is tight and tuneful rather than thunderous — the 300B has lower damping factor than a solid-state amplifier, which means bass behaviour is partly determined by the speaker. High-sensitivity full-range speakers designed for low-powered amplifiers (such as those using Fostex, Lowther, or AER drivers) are the natural partner for the 300B.

11.2 Speaker Matching Guide

Speaker SensitivitySPL at 1W/1m300B Suitability
Very High Efficiency98–104 dB✅ Ideal — concert-level SPL from 8 W; requires low-noise amp
High Efficiency93–97 dB✅ Excellent — full dynamic range in most rooms
Above Average89–92 dB⚠️ Adequate for small–medium rooms; limited headroom
Standard85–88 dB❌ Not recommended — insufficient power for adequate dynamics

12. Upgrade Paths

Once the basic amplifier is working well, numerous upgrade paths can improve performance:

  • Premium coupling capacitors: Replace stock film caps with Jensen oil-paper, Mundorf Silver/Gold, or Duelund CAST. These are expensive but often produce a clearly audible improvement in midrange texture and air.
  • Better output transformers: Upgrading from a Hammond 1627SEA to a Lundahl LL1623 or Hashimoto unit is the highest-return investment in sound quality.
  • Regulated B+ supply: A well-designed regulated HV supply reduces noise and stiffens the power supply, improving bass dynamics and soundstage depth.
  • Tube rolling: Try different 300B brands. The Linlai E-300B, EML 300B, and Western Electric 300B all have distinctly different sound characters.
  • Phono stage: Add an external or internal MM/MC phono stage to enjoy vinyl.
  • Volume control: A high-quality stepped attenuator (e.g. Khozmo, Goldpoint) or passive preamp improves channel balance and tracking at low volumes compared to a standard potentiometer.

Build a 300B amplifier that truly sings.
A Meticulously Crafted 300B PCBA—An Alternative to Point-to-Point Wiring.

🛒 Shop 300B PCBA Board

References

  1. Ken. "DIY 300B Amplifier." DIY Audio Guide, March 2011. https://www.diy-audio-guide.com/diy-300b-amplifier.html
  2. Morrison, J.C. "300B Single-Ended (SE) Tube Amplifier Schematic (6SN7 input)." DIY Audio Projects, September 2014. https://www.diyaudioprojects.com/Schematics/300B-SE-Tube-Amp-Schematic.htm
  3. diyAudio Community. "Very very simple single ended 300B valve amp schematic?" diyAudio Forums, April 2015. https://www.diyaudio.com/community/threads/...
  4. Western Electric. "300B Triode Data Sheet." https://western-electric.squarespace.com/s/300B.pdf
  5. Emission Labs. "EML 300B Data Sheet." http://www.emissionlabs.com/datasheets/EML300B.html
  6. Jones, M. Valve Amplifiers. 4th ed. Newnes / Butterworth-Heinemann, 2012.
  7. Blencowe, M. Designing Tube Preamps for Guitar and Bass. Crowood Press, 2009.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Soft Start and Delayed B+ Power-Up Circuits for Vacuum Tube Amplifiers — Professional Revised Edition

Soft Start and Delayed B+ Power-Up Circuits for Vacuum Tube Amplifiers — Professional Revised Edition

Published by IWISTAO 

1. Introduction — Why Soft Start Matters

Vacuum tube amplifiers are valued for their sound and operating character, but their power-up behaviour deserves careful design. Unlike most solid-state equipment, a tube amplifier usually involves a transformer, rectifier, reservoir capacitors, heaters, and high-voltage rails that do not all reach steady state at the same time. Good start-up design is therefore less about folklore and more about managing electrical stress in a controlled, repeatable way.

The two most important design concerns at switch-on are:

  • Inrush current surge — Transformer magnetising current, mains phase at switch-on, and charging current into reservoir capacitors can produce a short but sometimes substantial surge, stressing switches, fuses, rectifiers, and transformer windings.
  • Early application of B+ — In amplifiers that use solid-state rectifiers, the high-voltage rail may rise much faster than the cathodes or filaments warm up. In some designs this can increase start-up stress on tubes and on the power supply, especially in high-voltage or directly-heated output stages.
A soft-start or delayed-B+ scheme should be viewed primarily as a reliability and stress-management measure. Its value depends on the tube type, operating voltage, rectifier topology, and the overall power-supply design — not on a single universal rule.

Inrush current comparison: without soft start the peak can reach 50–100 A; with an NTC thermistor it is limited to ≈10–15 A.

2. What Happens at Power-On — The Physics of Inrush & Cathode Stress

2.1 The Inrush Current Problem

When you flip the power switch, the mains transformer core starts from zero magnetisation. In the worst case (switch closure at a peak of the AC cycle), the transformer can briefly saturate, dropping its effective impedance to near the DC winding resistance — typically a few ohms at most. Simultaneously, the large electrolytic filter capacitors downstream are completely discharged.

The combined effect is an inrush current pulse that can reach 50–100 A peak in a typical 150–300 W amplifier, even though steady-state current draw is only 1–3 A. This pulse:

  • Stresses rectifier diodes beyond their repetitive peak current rating
  • Can rupture slow-blow fuses rated correctly for steady-state current
  • Magnetises transformer core asymmetrically, causing audible mechanical buzzing on subsequent power cycles
  • Degrades electrolytic capacitors through repeated charge-shock

2.2 Cold-Cathode Stress and Why Designers Delay B+

Oxide-coated cathodes rely on temperature to produce stable thermionic emission. Before warm-up is complete, the tube is not yet operating in its intended region, even if plate voltage is already present.

In classic tube-rectified amplifiers, B+ usually rises more gradually because the rectifier itself must warm before it conducts. That behaviour often provides a useful degree of natural sequencing, although it should not be described as a universal guarantee that start-up stress is zero.

In silicon-rectified designs, the high-voltage rail can appear much more quickly than heater or cathode warm-up. In audio amplifiers, the practical concern is best described as turn-on stress and tube gentleness, rather than assuming that every cold start at 300–500 V automatically causes severe cathode stripping.

  • Tube stress: operating conditions are temporarily outside the normal warm, emissive state.
  • Power-supply stress: rectifiers and filter capacitors may see a steeper charging event.
  • Reliability margin: expensive DHT stages and high-voltage supplies generally benefit most from conservative sequencing.
  • Design implication: delayed B+ is a prudent engineering measure, but its necessity depends on the specific amplifier.

NTC thermistor inrush limiter wired in series with the mains primary. At cold start the high resistance limits surge current; once hot, resistance drops to near zero.

3. Types of Soft Start Circuits — Overview

There are four main strategies for soft-starting a tube amplifier, each with different tradeoffs:

Method What It Protects Complexity Cost (Approx.) Best For
NTC Thermistor Mains inrush, transformer, rectifier Very Low $1–$3 Any amplifier; quick add-on
Relay + Timer Board Mains inrush (bypass thermistor after warm-up) Low–Medium $5–$20 Higher-power amps (>100 W)
B+ Delay (MOSFET/Relay) Cathode stripping; premature HV Medium $10–$30 Solid-state rectifier builds
Filament Soft Start (LM317) Filament inrush, DH tube life Medium $5–$15 DHT amps: 300B, 2A3, 45, 845

Most well-engineered amplifiers combine at least two of these approaches — for example, an NTC thermistor on the mains primary plus a B+ delay relay on the secondary side.

4. NTC Thermistor Inrush Current Limiter

4.1 How It Works

A Negative Temperature Coefficient (NTC) thermistor is a resistor whose resistance decreases as temperature rises. When cold (at switch-on), it presents a significant series resistance — typically 5–22 Ω — that limits the inrush current into the transformer and capacitors. Within 20–60 seconds of power-on, the thermistor heats up through its own I²R dissipation, and its resistance drops to 0.1–0.5 Ω, causing negligible voltage drop under normal operating conditions.

The thermistor is wired in series with the mains live (line) conductor, before the primary winding of the power transformer. This is the simplest possible approach — it requires no timer, no relay, no IC, and no additional power supply.

L (Live) NTC 5–22 Ω (cold) Transformer Primary Bridge Rectifier C (Filter) B+ N (Neutral)

Figure 1 — NTC thermistor wired in series with the mains primary. At cold start it limits inrush; once hot, resistance drops to near zero.

4.2 Selecting the Right NTC

Choose an NTC thermistor rated for:

  • Maximum continuous current ≥ 1.5× your amplifier's steady-state mains current (e.g. a 200 VA amplifier drawing ~1 A at 230 V needs an NTC rated ≥ 1.5 A)
  • Cold resistance of 5–22 Ω (higher values give more protection but also more voltage drop if the thermistor does not heat adequately)
  • Body diameter ≥ 15 mm for adequate thermal mass (prevents premature self-heating cooling if the amp is switched off and quickly back on)
Part Number Cold Resistance Max Current Notes
CL-60 10 Ω 4 A Popular choice for amps up to ~300 W
SL32 5R021 5 Ω 8 A Higher power applications
SL22 10019 10 Ω 5 A Compact; good for integrated amps
MS20 22019 22 Ω 3 A Maximum inrush protection
Thermal Reset Problem: If you switch the amplifier off and immediately back on (within 1–2 minutes), the NTC is still hot and will present very low resistance — offering little inrush protection. For critical installations or frequently power-cycled amps, consider the relay bypass method described in Section 5.

5. Relay Timer Delay Board (NTC + Bypass Relay)

A more sophisticated approach combines an NTC thermistor with a relay that short-circuits the thermistor after the initial warm-up period. This eliminates the thermistor's residual I²R loss and solves the thermal reset problem.

5.1 Circuit Operation

T = 0 s — Switch On

Mains current flows through the NTC thermistor (high cold resistance, e.g. 10 Ω). Inrush current is limited to a safe level. The timer circuit begins counting.

T = 2–5 s — Capacitors Charged

The filter capacitors have charged to near full B+ voltage. The transformer and rectifier are no longer under surge stress. NTC is warming up.

T = 10–30 s — Timer Expires

The relay coil energises, closing its normally-open contacts in parallel with the NTC. The thermistor is now bypassed; full mains voltage is applied directly to the transformer primary with zero additional resistance.

Normal Operation

Relay remains closed. Amplifier draws full rated current with no I²R loss. On next switch-off, the relay opens; on next power-on, the NTC is back in circuit — regardless of its temperature.

5.2 Timer Circuit Implementation

The delay timer can be built around:

  • 555 Timer IC (monostable) — Classic approach. RC network sets the delay (t = 1.1 × R × C). For t = 20 s: R = 2 MΩ, C = 10 µF.
  • NE555 + TRIAC or relay driver — Adds mains isolation via an optocoupler.
  • Dedicated delay relay modules — Ready-made PCB modules widely available for $3–$15, typically using an adjustable RC or crystal oscillator, with an onboard relay and screw terminals. Simply connect mains-in, NTC, relay bypass, and load.
  • Microcontroller (ATtiny, PIC) — Overkill for a simple delay, but allows programmable multi-stage sequencing and LED status indication.

Relay-based B+ delay circuit. The relay's NO contacts block the HV rail until the timer expires; the R-pad limits charge current into filter capacitors when the relay closes.
Ready-Made Delay Relay Boards: Modules based on the NE555 or CD4060 counter can be useful on the control side of a DIY design. However, they are not automatically a complete B+ solution: suitability still depends on relay DC ratings, creepage/clearance, insulation, PCB quality, and safe high-voltage wiring practice.

6. B+ High-Voltage Delay Circuit

While NTCs and primary-side relay schemes mainly address mains inrush, a B+ delay circuit works on the secondary (high-voltage) side. Its purpose is to keep plate voltage absent, or at least reduced, until the heater/cathode system has had time to warm.

In solid-state-rectified amplifiers, this is best understood as a conservative way to reduce start-up stress. As a practical rule of thumb, indirectly heated output stages often use roughly 15–30 seconds before full B+, while directly heated triodes such as the 300B, 2A3, and 45 are often given 30–60 seconds or more. Exact timing depends on measured warm-up behaviour and overall circuit topology.

6.1 Tube Rectifier as a Natural Source of Delay

A traditional way to obtain a gentler B+ rise is to use a tube rectifier. Because the rectifier must warm before it conducts, the high-voltage rail often rises more slowly than it does with silicon diodes.

That said, not all rectifier tubes behave the same way. Indirectly heated types such as the 5AR4/GZ34 are commonly chosen when a useful natural delay is desired, whereas directly heated rectifiers such as many 5U4G or 274B variants should not simply be assumed to provide the same sequencing behaviour. The benefit is real, but it is tube-dependent rather than universal.

6.2 Relay-Based B+ Delay

For amplifiers using solid-state rectifiers, a high-voltage relay can be wired in series with the B+ rail. The relay remains open (breaking the HV circuit) until a timer expires, then closes to apply B+.

Key design considerations for HV relay circuits:

  • The relay must be rated for the full B+ voltage (typically 300–500 V DC), not just its coil voltage. Check verified DC switching capability, not merely the AC mains rating.
  • A series resistor, pre-charge path, or other current-limiting element can be used to reduce the initial charging stress when the relay closes.
  • If the filter bank is large, partial pre-charge before full connection can further soften the turn-on transient.
  • A diode clamp across the relay coil prevents back-EMF from damaging the timer transistor or IC.
HV+ Relay (NO contacts) R-pad 10–200 Ω/10 W C1 C2 B+ to amp Bleed R GND (common) Delay Timer 555 / NE556 / µC Relay coil drive

Figure 2 — Relay-based B+ delay circuit. The relay's NO contacts open the HV rail until the timer expires. The R-pad limits charge current into filter capacitors when the relay closes.

7. Filament Soft Start Circuit Using LM317 / LM337

The filament (heater) of a directly-heated triode (DHT) such as the 300B, 2A3, 45, 50, 845, or 211 is itself a component that benefits from controlled start-up. At room temperature, filament resistance is substantially lower than it is at normal operating temperature, so initial current can be markedly higher than steady-state current.

One practical approach is to use a voltage regulator IC with a soft-start modification. The LM317 (a positive adjustable regulator, typically used up to about 1.5 A with proper heatsinking) and LM337 (the negative-voltage counterpart) can work well in lower-current filament supplies. Their output voltage is set by an external resistor divider, and an RC network can make the output ramp up gradually over several seconds.

7.1 LM317 Soft-Start Principle

The standard LM317 output voltage formula is:

Vout = 1.25 × (1 + R2 / R1)

In the soft-start modification, a PNP transistor (e.g. 2N2905, BC557) is connected so that a capacitor in its base-emitter circuit initially pulls the ADJ pin towards the output, reducing Vout to near zero. As the capacitor charges through a resistor (Rdelay), the transistor gradually turns off, and Vout ramps up to its designed setpoint.

The ramp-up time constant is approximately: τ ≈ R_delay × C_delay

For a 20-second ramp: use Rdelay = 470 kΩ and Cdelay = 47 µF (electrolytic). For a 60-second ramp: use Rdelay = 1.5 MΩ and Cdelay = 47 µF.

7.2 Key Design Points

  • Input voltage headroom: LM317 requires at least 3 V across input-to-output (dropout voltage). For a 6 V filament supply, the input must be ≥ 9 V before regulation.
  • Heat dissipation: The LM317 dissipates (Vin − Vout) × I. For a 300B with 5 V / 1.2 A filament running from a 10 V supply: P = (10 − 5) × 1.2 = 6 W. A substantial heatsink is required.
  • Current capacity: If filament current exceeds the practical capability of an LM317 design, consider the LM350 (3 A), LM338 (5 A), or a dedicated higher-current regulator/pass-transistor solution. Thermal dissipation usually becomes the real limit before the headline current rating does.
  • DHT bias configuration:
    • For fixed bias DHTs: one end of filament to ground, regulator output floating.
    • For self-bias DHTs: both regulator terminals float above cathode potential.
    • For hum-nulling in AC filament designs: a centre-tap pot or bridge circuit provides a virtual centre-tap.
  • B+ must come after filament: Always ensure B+ is applied after the filament soft-start ramp is complete. A separate B+ delay relay (Section 6) handles this.

8. MOSFET-Based High-Voltage Delay Circuit

For higher reliability and lower contact resistance than a mechanical relay, a power MOSFET can switch the B+ rail. A MOSFET has no moving parts, no contact bounce, near-zero on-resistance when fully enhanced, and a virtually unlimited switching cycle life.

8.1 Circuit Description

A high-voltage N-channel MOSFET (e.g. IRF830: 500 V, 4.5 A, RDS(on) = 1.5 Ω) is placed in series with the B+ rail. Its gate is driven by a photovoltaic optocoupler (e.g. PVI1050 or Avago ASSR-V621-002E), which provides 2,500 V of galvanic isolation between the low-voltage timer circuit and the dangerous high-voltage rail.

The power-on sequence works as follows:

  1. At switch-on, the 6.3 VAC filament transformer energises. A small bridge rectifier and 7.5 V regulator derive the timer supply from this winding.
  2. A 100 µF timing capacitor begins charging through a 300 kΩ resistor. During charging (~35 seconds), the 741 op-amp comparator output is HIGH, keeping the optocoupler LED off. The MOSFET gate is undriven (low) → MOSFET off → B+ open-circuit.
  3. When the capacitor voltage crosses the comparator threshold (2/3 of VCC ≈ 5 V), the comparator output goes LOW, turning on the optocoupler LED.
  4. The photovoltaic cells inside the optocoupler generate ~10 V open-circuit, driving the MOSFET gate into full enhancement. B+ is now switched on through the MOSFET and an R-pad resistor into the filter capacitors.
  5. A 1N5818 Schottky diode discharges the timing capacitor rapidly at power-off, ensuring a full delay on the next power-on cycle.

8.2 Component Selection for MOSFET Circuit

Component Recommended Part Key Parameter Notes
Power MOSFET IRF830, IRF840, STF12NM50N VDS ≥ 500 V; ID ≥ 3 A Mount on heatsink; add gate stopper resistor (100 Ω)
Photovoltaic Optocoupler PVI1050, ASSR-V621, VOM1271 ISO ≥ 2,500 V; VOC ≥ 10 V Provides HV isolation; costly but critical
Comparator IC LM741, LM393, TL071 Single-supply OK Sets threshold and drives optocoupler
Timing Capacitor 100 µF / 25 V electrolytic Low leakage Increase C or R to lengthen delay
Timing Resistor 300 kΩ — 1 MΩ 1% metal film t ≈ 1.1 × R × C
R-pad (soft charge) 100 Ω / 10 W wirewound Limits cap charge current Bypass with relay after 1–2 s if desired
Discharge diode 1N5818 Schottky Fast recovery Discharges timing cap at power-off
HIGH VOLTAGE DANGER — LIVE CIRCUIT: The B+ rail in a tube amplifier typically operates at 250–500 V DC. This voltage is lethal. Always discharge all filter capacitors (measure with a meter before touching anything) and work with the amplifier completely de-energised. A 10 kΩ / 10 W resistor wired to a well-insulated probe is the standard tool for safe manual capacitor discharge.

9. Power-On Sequencing Best Practices

A correctly designed tube amplifier follows a strict power-on sequence that mirrors the warm-up requirements of its tubes. The general rule, codified in many vintage designs and modern high-end builds, is:

  1. Filament / Heater supply ON — All heaters come on first, including the output tubes, driver tubes, and small-signal tubes. This begins warming up cathodes.
  2. Wait 30–90 seconds — Allow cathodes to reach operating temperature. DHTs (300B, 2A3) need longer than indirectly-heated types (EL34, KT88). During this time, B+ is zero.
  3. B+ rises slowly — Either through a tube rectifier natural ramp, an R-pad charging into filter caps, or an LM317/MOSFET soft-ramp circuit. B+ should rise over 3–10 seconds, not instantaneously.
  4. Bias stabilises — After B+ settles, the output stage reaches thermal equilibrium and the bias current stabilises. This typically takes another 5–10 minutes to fully stabilise.
  5. Audio signal connected — In automated designs, a relay disconnects speaker outputs during warm-up and reconnects only after full stabilisation. This also prevents power-on thumps from reaching the speakers.

Recommended power-on sequence timing diagram. Filament supply comes on first; B+ rises only after sufficient cathode warm-up; speakers connect last.

9.1 Recommended Delay Times by Tube Type

The following timings are practical starting points, not universal rules. Final values should be chosen according to tube type, filament supply method, rectifier topology, measured warm-up behaviour, and the amplifier's actual operating voltage.

Tube Type Examples Min. Filament Warm-Up Recommended B+ Delay
Directly-Heated Triode (DHT) 300B, 2A3, 45, 50, 211, 845 30–60 s typical 30–60 s typical
Indirectly-Heated Pentode / Tetrode EL34, KT88, KT150, EL84, 6550 15–30 s typical 15–30 s typical
Small-Signal Triode (indirectly heated) 12AX7, 6SN7, 12AU7, 6DJ8 10–15 s typical Usually follows output-stage timing
Tube Rectifier 5AR4/GZ34, 5U4G, 274B Tube-dependent natural delay Evaluate by rectifier type and measured B+ rise

10. Component Selection Guide

10.1 Relay Selection for B+ Switching

Mechanical relays for B+ switching require careful selection. The most important specification is the DC switching voltage and current — not the AC rating. DC arcing is more destructive than AC arcing because the current does not pass through zero naturally.

  • Look for relays with gold-plated contacts or special alloy contacts rated for high-voltage DC.
  • Brands to consider: Omron G2R series, Panasonic ALQ, Takamisawa RY series, TE Connectivity IM-series.
  • Check that the verified DC breaking capacity exceeds your actual B+ conditions with a sensible safety margin, taking both voltage and charging current into account.
  • For B+ switching, double-pole relays (breaking both HV+ and the return) are preferred for extra safety.

10.2 Capacitor Sizing for Filter and Timing

  • B+ filter capacitors: 100–470 µF per stage at appropriate voltage rating (rated V ≥ 1.5 × B+ for adequate margin). Chemicon, Nichicon, and Panasonic FM/FC series are recommended for audio.
  • Timing capacitors: Use low-leakage electrolytics (85 °C or better). Leakage affects timing accuracy — a high-leakage cap causes shorter-than-expected delays.
  • Snubber capacitor across relay contacts: 10–100 nF / 630 V film capacitor absorbs the spike when relay contacts open on B+ rail.

10.3 Mains Fusing

With a soft-start circuit in place, the primary fuse can be rated closer to the steady-state operating current without blowing on power-on. Without soft start, slow-blow fuses are mandatory. Recommended fusing:

  • With NTC or relay soft-start: Time-lag (slow-blow) fuse at 1.5 × steady-state current
  • Without soft start: Time-lag fuse at 2–3 × steady-state current (reducing short-circuit protection)
  • Always fuse both primary and each secondary winding where practical

11. DIY Build Tips & Safety

11.1 PCB vs. Point-to-Point Construction

Soft-start and B+ delay circuits can be built on perfboard or a custom PCB. For the high-voltage sections:

  • Maintain at least 6 mm creepage distance between HV nodes and any grounded or low-voltage traces
  • Use 1,000 V rated PCB material (standard FR4 is acceptable up to ~600 V if dry and well-lacquered)
  • Apply conformal coating or PCB lacquer to prevent tracking and moisture ingress
  • Mark HV nodes clearly with red wire and warning labels

11.2 Testing Procedure

  1. Bench test without tubes installed — power the amp without tubes and verify that B+ remains at 0 V for the full delay period, then rises smoothly.
  2. Monitor with oscilloscope — capture the B+ rise waveform. It should be smooth and gradual; any large voltage spike indicates improper R-pad sizing or relay contact bounce.
  3. Measure inrush current — using a clamp meter or an oscilloscope with a current probe, confirm the mains inrush does not exceed the specifications of your rectifier, fuse, and relay.
  4. Verify timing — use a stopwatch to confirm the actual delay matches the design target. Adjust RC values if needed.
  5. Thermal check — after 30 minutes of operation, check the temperature of the NTC thermistor, voltage regulator heatsinks, and any power resistors. Nothing should be uncomfortably hot.

11.3 Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using an NTC without bypass relay at high power levels — the thermistor may overheat or fail to provide adequate delay if it stays hot
  • Forgetting the gate stopper resistor on a power MOSFET — without it, oscillation can destroy the MOSFET; always use 100–470 Ω in series with the gate lead
  • Using relay rated for AC voltage on DC rails — DC breaking capacity is typically 1/5 of AC breaking capacity for the same relay; check the datasheet
  • Omitting the timing capacitor discharge diode — without a fast-discharge path, the timing cap retains its charge after power-off, and the next power-on has a shorter (or no) delay
  • Applying B+ before filament is up to temperature in DHT amps — even with a delay relay, if the timer is set too short for your specific DHT tube, cathode damage can still occur
  • No bleeder resistor on B+ rail — without a bleeder, B+ remains at dangerous voltage for minutes after power-off. A 47–100 kΩ / 5 W resistor discharges the filter caps safely
Tip — Listen to Your Amp: A properly working soft-start system should produce no audible "thump" or relay click from the speakers at turn-on. If you hear a thump, the B+ is rising too fast, or the delay is too short. If you hear a prolonged hiss during warm-up, the tubes may be drawing excessive current from a cold cathode — increase the B+ delay.

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References

Editorial note: this revised edition intentionally removes unsupported life-extension percentages, avoids absolute claims about cathode stripping in all audio amplifiers, and treats delay timing as a design-dependent rule of thumb rather than a fixed law.

  1. DIY Audio Guide. "Soft Start." diy-audio-guide.com. https://www.diy-audio-guide.com/soft-start.html
  2. Cook, G.F. "Vacuum Tube B+ Delay Circuit." SolOrb Electronics, 2013. https://www.solorb.com/elect/musiccirc/bplusdelay/
  3. diyAudio Community. "Yet Another Soft Start Circuit." diyAudio Forums, June 2019. https://www.diyaudio.com/community/threads/yet-another-soft-start-circuit.339117/
  4. Texas Instruments. "Taming Linear-Regulator Inrush Currents." Application Report SLYT332, August 2011. https://www.ti.com/lit/an/slyt332/slyt332.pdf
  5. Millman, J. & Halkias, C. Electronics — Analog and Digital Circuits and Systems. McGraw-Hill, 1972.
  6. Jones, M. Valve Amplifiers. 4th ed. Newnes / Butterworth-Heinemann, 2012.