Steve Conner:
JMaf:
Thank you both for the only two belly-laughs I've had today Yeah, 7 days on my back and 30 more with the cast. But I'm cool, just using it as a research period!
I have seen the freewebs stuff and downloaded a lot of it as reference, excellent info - thanks for reminding me about it.
Steve - cool amps you've done. And that corvette sounded great. Dang you Scots have cool accents!
So, i guess the schematic is about ready for me to do the layout on. Tho i do want to double check my plan on the heater wiring...
As I mentioned, Fred Nachbaur said you can have the 12ax7 'sum' the currents allowing you to use 150ma and 300ma tubes together. Would something like the attached diagram do the trick then?
Fred said:
Link is: "Spunky" Tube Amplifier - How It Works
PS, my fanbase just doubled, I am delighted!
I watched every Nat Geo program there is...wanna know about the most poisonous jellyfish on Earth? Komodo Dragons? How houses are built on ice?
I have seen the freewebs stuff and downloaded a lot of it as reference, excellent info - thanks for reminding me about it.
Steve - cool amps you've done. And that corvette sounded great. Dang you Scots have cool accents!
So, i guess the schematic is about ready for me to do the layout on. Tho i do want to double check my plan on the heater wiring...
As I mentioned, Fred Nachbaur said you can have the 12ax7 'sum' the currents allowing you to use 150ma and 300ma tubes together. Would something like the attached diagram do the trick then?
Fred said:
Note the slightly unusual series-parallel arrangment; each pair of 35C5 output tube filaments is in series with one half of the 12AU7 dual triode. The center-tap of the 12AU7 sums the two branch currents (150 mA each) into the preamp tube, giving 300 mA as required for this valve's heater supply.
While unusual, this geometry is eminently stable and safe. If any tube is removed (or its filament burns out), none of the others will suffer as a result, unlike some series-wired television sets where a single burnout could take out several other tubes at the same time.
While unusual, this geometry is eminently stable and safe. If any tube is removed (or its filament burns out), none of the others will suffer as a result, unlike some series-wired television sets where a single burnout could take out several other tubes at the same time.
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