I really don't think you should get nutty with the screen grid resistors. Something like 2.2k would be about as high as I ever see in a design. That wouldn't decrease dissipation enough for the correction you need.
Since you already have a cathode resistor the 1 ohm resistor is sort of redundant. You can use the cathode resistor to figure the shared current. Provided that resistor is on spec your shared current is 183mA!!! That's 91.5mA per tube!! If you subtract the cathode voltage from your plate voltage we get a working voltage of 406.4Vp. If we multiply the current (per tube) by the working voltage it shows your amp is dissipating 37 watts per tube!!! I suspect either your cathode resistor or your 1 ohm resistors spec low, but even if we use your figure of roughly 67mA per tube that's still 27 watts per tube. You need to get that down brother! I don't know what you have on hand but I think a 330 ohm cathode resistor would be about right. Or...
If you have another 200 ohm resistor you could put it on the HV winding center tap before ground. That would simulate a rectifier tube somewhat adding sag and softening the attack envelope. Way better idea than giant screen resistors. This will also drop the Vp to about 400. Which gives you a working voltage of about 365. In this case a 250 ohm cathode resistor should be better. What values of big resistors do you have on hand?
And you never answered my Q about the PT spec for that circuit.?. I'm in serious doubt that the original design spec'd a 200 ohm cathode resistor with over 440Vp.
Since you already have a cathode resistor the 1 ohm resistor is sort of redundant. You can use the cathode resistor to figure the shared current. Provided that resistor is on spec your shared current is 183mA!!! That's 91.5mA per tube!! If you subtract the cathode voltage from your plate voltage we get a working voltage of 406.4Vp. If we multiply the current (per tube) by the working voltage it shows your amp is dissipating 37 watts per tube!!! I suspect either your cathode resistor or your 1 ohm resistors spec low, but even if we use your figure of roughly 67mA per tube that's still 27 watts per tube. You need to get that down brother! I don't know what you have on hand but I think a 330 ohm cathode resistor would be about right. Or...
If you have another 200 ohm resistor you could put it on the HV winding center tap before ground. That would simulate a rectifier tube somewhat adding sag and softening the attack envelope. Way better idea than giant screen resistors. This will also drop the Vp to about 400. Which gives you a working voltage of about 365. In this case a 250 ohm cathode resistor should be better. What values of big resistors do you have on hand?
And you never answered my Q about the PT spec for that circuit.?. I'm in serious doubt that the original design spec'd a 200 ohm cathode resistor with over 440Vp.
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