I posted this over on diyAudio and Enzo suggested that I might get more information here. (I actually hadn't found this site before, somehow. Glad to be here. Clearly another excellent source of information.).
I was watching a demo of the Matchless Chieftain on YouTube and I really liked the sound. I can't quite describe it, but it just sounds powerful. I pulled up the schematic for it and I noticed it's unusual in a few ways.
The first is that the preamp and reverb driver are 12AX7s with both sides of the tube wired in parallel (share plate resistors, cathode resistors and bypass caps, when used). Anyone know why that is? (Enzo, in his message to me, suggested that it can average out noise and it affects the impedance, but didn't really elaborate)
Another thing that's unusual is that the tone stack is split between the first and second stage. The bass and mid tone controls follow the first stage and the treble (and volume) follow the second stage.
I'm just curious about it from a design perspective. Can anyone kind of give me an overview of the whys of the paralleled tubes and the split tone stack?
I was watching a demo of the Matchless Chieftain on YouTube and I really liked the sound. I can't quite describe it, but it just sounds powerful. I pulled up the schematic for it and I noticed it's unusual in a few ways.
The first is that the preamp and reverb driver are 12AX7s with both sides of the tube wired in parallel (share plate resistors, cathode resistors and bypass caps, when used). Anyone know why that is? (Enzo, in his message to me, suggested that it can average out noise and it affects the impedance, but didn't really elaborate)
Another thing that's unusual is that the tone stack is split between the first and second stage. The bass and mid tone controls follow the first stage and the treble (and volume) follow the second stage.
I'm just curious about it from a design perspective. Can anyone kind of give me an overview of the whys of the paralleled tubes and the split tone stack?
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