Back then, knowing even less about tube amps I built a home-made bias probe... using a 6L6 socket, that doeasn't have pin #1 which is the suppressor grid. I have used that contraption to bias a BUNCH of amps since.. Now I'm biting my nails and wondering what is the impact of leaving out that pin on EL34s for just one of a pair or quad of EL34s? Could it have affected the current draw or done damage to something?
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Oups!! I've been biasing EL34's for 10 years with a bias-probe that has no pin #1
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Originally posted by Iplayloud View PostBack then, knowing even less about tube amps I built a home-made bias probe... using a 6L6 socket, that doeasn't have pin #1 which is the suppressor grid. I have used that contraption to bias a BUNCH of amps since.. Now I'm biting my nails and wondering what is the impact of leaving out that pin on EL34s for just one of a pair or quad of EL34s? Could it have affected the current draw or done damage to something?
If you have any of those amps close by you can do like this. Do this for both sides of the push pull power stage.
Resistance R = pin 3 to centre tap.
Measure voltage drop U = centre tap - pin 3 (pin 3 same points as above )
Calculate current I = U/R
Finally W = I*U
(This might be somewhat crude if it's more than a pair of tubes in the power stage, but it gives you a fair idea of what's happening in the power stage.)In this forum everyone is entitled to my opinion.
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Wouldn't worry about bias or the disconnected suppressor grid? I don't feel that I could do it by ear, for example I installed a tube/ss rectifier switch on my princeton clone and on the ss setting the 6v6s go from drawing 20 mA to 29mA which is way too high and just by ear I couldn't have heard it. Your formula is interesting though..
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Originally posted by überfuzz View PostResistance R = pin 3 to centre tap.
Measure voltage drop U = centre tap - pin 3 (pin 3 same points as above )
Calculate current I = U/R
Finally W = I*U
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Do an experiment: Set the bias with the suppressor disconnected, then connect it and measure the bias again. This will give you a better feel for how it will behave than any theoretical discussion. I would guess it would act like a tetrode with the suppressor floating, but I've never actually tried that.
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I don't know of any effect on the bias current but I did once forget to connect pin 1 to pin 8 on a 2 x EL34 cathode biased amp. It was a long time ago but I seem to remember that it was unstable at high volume (funny noises) and didn't make full output power.
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