I have never paid much attention before to actual bias voltage because I use the 1ohm resistor method. I just decided to probe around and realized I got -48v before the split and -38v after.I thought bias voltage was static and not being spent. Why the drop then?
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Is the voltage supposed to drop across the bias splitting resistors?
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Originally posted by Iplayloud View PostI have never paid much attention before to actual bias voltage because I use the 1ohm resistor method. I just decided to probe around and realized I got -48v before the split and -38v after.I thought bias voltage was static and not being spent. Why the drop then?This isn't the future I signed up for.
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You mean the split for the 2 halves (push and pull)? 10V does seem significant, which circuit are you looking at?Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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No and no.
What he means is that he measures -48V before the "bias splitting resistors" which are the typically 220K ones feeding the power tube grids, and he measures -38V "after" , meaning closer to the grids.
Which is normal, he's creating a new voltage divider with those 220K and the 1M multimeter internal resistance to ground.
What I asked sibo to do in his amp for some 100 posts.
I was interested in knowing whether there actually was bias voltage to begin with, and its value; Stan wanted to check whether it actually reached the tube grid pins, not caring that much about the voltage measurement precision but checking path integrity.
Oh well.
2 sides of the same coin.Juan Manuel Fahey
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostWhat he means is that he measures -48V before the "bias splitting resistors" which are the typically 220K ones feeding the power tube grids, and he measures -38V "after" , meaning closer to the grids.
Which is normal, he's creating a new voltage divider with those 220K and the 1M multimeter internal resistance to ground.
Exactly, the amp is a Fender style clone built in '71. Like a princeton with the half-tail PI but with a pair of 6L6. I don't see the interest of doing that instead of using a full blown PI and 6v6 as both cases yield 20 something watts.. except the half-tail stays clean all the way up? Anyhow, it sounds pretty good. So indeed I measured directly across the 220k splitting resistors and there is 0.0v
Case closed
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostWhich is normal, he's creating a new voltage divider with those 220K and the 1M multimeter internal resistance to ground.
I have run across the issue measuring the gate voltage of mute FET's, not sure what kind of meter I was using then.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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