What is the advantage of having the cathode follower? I experiment with and without the CF and I notice the sound is softer without it. Which is not necessary a bad thing. I speculate that CF present a low output impedance which make the sound brighter ( not affected by any capacitance loading). What else?
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What is the reason of having a cathode follower in Marshall type preamp circuit?
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The tone stack has a fairly low input impedance at high frequencies. Especially when the slope resistor is lowered to 33K. Without the follower, the tone stack sounds kind of dark. If you can correct the response at other places in the signal chain, you don't need the follower. The follower also adds it own distortion to large signals. It clips softly on positive peaks and fast negative slopes are limited by the 100K pull down.WARNING! Musical Instrument amplifiers contain lethal voltages and can retain them even when unplugged. Refer service to qualified personnel.
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Originally posted by PaulP Amps View Post
The article only talked about the grid current of the follower prevent the anode of the gain stage from going more positive and thereby create a flat top. That I agree. But the next part talk about the lower portion can go down unclipped and follower the anode of the gain stage. That I do not agree in real observation with the loading of the tone stack and the lower limit of the gain triode.
If you look at the example of +B=300V and the anode of the gain stage at 200 and Rk=100K. The anode can never goes below 120V. So it clips at the bottom also. I tried changing Rk higher and lower. If going to 68K, the wave form just being pull down, like it clipped lower on the high side but extend the clipping on the low side lower. The low side also limited by the current the Rk can sink before it runs out of steam like Loud thud said.
Bottom line, the clipping almost look symmetrical no matter how I played with the Rk. You hardly get a lot of even harmonics. And base on sound test, it is very harsh if the +B is about 350V!!! Nothing warm about it. . I lower the +B to 300V and it sounded a little softer. But then the swing become so limited.Last edited by Alan0354; 03-26-2014, 10:36 AM.
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Are you sure that you're not clipping the stage prior to the CF and reading THAT wave form as processed by the CF??? This is paramount info. You can't analyze how a CF clips if you put a clipped wave into it."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
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That's a tricky point, because a dc coupled cathode follower is a dual triode arrangement.
It wouldn't make sense to ignore or eliminate the preceding gain stage from the analysis, as without it the cathode follower probably wouldn't operate in the same way.
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Well I don't mean to eliminate it. But scope the signal at that preceding stage to see if whatever clipping is being attributed to CF may actually be what's going into it rather than what the CF itself is doing."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Yes, I scoped and reduce the drive so the preceding stage are all lineal......well in distort a little, but no where close to clipping. It basically looks like a sine wave. Of cause, if the preceding stage is clipping, all bets are off.
I am not saying the output is symmetrical, but just not very asymmetrical that produce a lot of even harmonics. No matter how I change the Rk or changing the +B, it basically moving the DC offset and slightly changing the amplitude. It does change the symmetry a little, but really nothing to write home. You can change the symmetry more by playing with the normal common cathode stage by adjusting the Rk and plate resistor to clipper fast on the top or bottom of the sine wave.
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Originally posted by jazbo8 View PostYou meant you are not able to duplicate the clipping characteristics as shown on Merlin's page with the TS connected at the cathode? If so, could you please post the scope shots.
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Sweet!"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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It doesn't take a lot of asymmetry to notice a bump in the 2nd harmonic. IIRC another thing the CF does is cut the corners a bit on sharp clipped edges. So that would lessen some very high order harmonics? This might make the 2nd harmonic more dominant just by shifting the balance. And of course there's the low impedance that diminishes the effect of impedance rise with frequency. So the tone might seem to be brighter, but less hashy. It's definitely a good thing for some designs. If you don't like it for your amp, don't use it."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Originally posted by Alan0354 View PostYes, I scoped and reduce the drive so the preceding stage are all lineal......well in distort a little, but no where close to clipping. It basically looks like a sine wave. Of cause, if the preceding stage is clipping, all bets are off.
I am not saying the output is symmetrical, but just not very asymmetrical that produce a lot of even harmonics. No matter how I change the Rk or changing the +B, it basically moving the DC offset and slightly changing the amplitude. It does change the symmetry a little, but really nothing to write home. You can change the symmetry more by playing with the normal common cathode stage by adjusting the Rk and plate resistor to clipper fast on the top or bottom of the sine wave.Experience is something you get, just after you really needed it.
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