I have a conn amp that I decided to acquire for conversion to a guitar amp. I had been communicating with a builder/converter in Ohio through emails but cannot seem to get return communication any more. He had led me through initial stages, as well I have been reading extensively on the theory.
My issue is that I had wiring for the heaters from the PT at 6.3v, both green outputs rated at 6.3v with a center tap wire (grn/ylw). I wired the heaters just as instructed and everything seemed fine. I had three preamp tubes in their sockets along with two power tubes, a 6l6gb and 6l6gc (came with the amp that way). The gb will no longer show signs of the heater glowing. In the middle of this build I had acquired another amp, this time a Hammond, that had 3.2v heater taps with ct. I wasn't familiar initially with this but found info that checking pin to pin on the socket once wired yielded a result of 6.3v.
Once this 6l6gb stopped working I did the same test as was done on the Hammond, yielding 12.6v across the heater. Understanding that the preamp tubes will work with 6.3v or 12.6v on the heaters there would be no ill effect on them. But did I have the power tube sockets wired at 12.6v since I ran a lead of 6.3v pin to pin on one side and then the other 6.3v lead to the other pin to pin?
The conn amp had originally ran 4x 12v6's and then 2x 6l6's. Were the 6l6's wired in a fashion to drop the heater voltage? My problem is that the person helping instructed the teardown but I didn't take note of any difference on the 6l6 sockets to see if a change was made from the factory to regulate the voltage for these sockets vs. the preamp and 12v6's.
I would appreciate not only some direction on my issue stated above but also some direction on reading. I see many publications referenced for understanding tube amp building, what is really the best for the novice to understand the basics? I acquired yet another small amp and will be going forward with all three projects but have realized that there are so many differences that the net/web cannot pin down accurately enough. Thanks in advance, finding that this is a great site for info and the building is an exciting task. Can't wait to fire up my first amp!
My issue is that I had wiring for the heaters from the PT at 6.3v, both green outputs rated at 6.3v with a center tap wire (grn/ylw). I wired the heaters just as instructed and everything seemed fine. I had three preamp tubes in their sockets along with two power tubes, a 6l6gb and 6l6gc (came with the amp that way). The gb will no longer show signs of the heater glowing. In the middle of this build I had acquired another amp, this time a Hammond, that had 3.2v heater taps with ct. I wasn't familiar initially with this but found info that checking pin to pin on the socket once wired yielded a result of 6.3v.
Once this 6l6gb stopped working I did the same test as was done on the Hammond, yielding 12.6v across the heater. Understanding that the preamp tubes will work with 6.3v or 12.6v on the heaters there would be no ill effect on them. But did I have the power tube sockets wired at 12.6v since I ran a lead of 6.3v pin to pin on one side and then the other 6.3v lead to the other pin to pin?
The conn amp had originally ran 4x 12v6's and then 2x 6l6's. Were the 6l6's wired in a fashion to drop the heater voltage? My problem is that the person helping instructed the teardown but I didn't take note of any difference on the 6l6 sockets to see if a change was made from the factory to regulate the voltage for these sockets vs. the preamp and 12v6's.
I would appreciate not only some direction on my issue stated above but also some direction on reading. I see many publications referenced for understanding tube amp building, what is really the best for the novice to understand the basics? I acquired yet another small amp and will be going forward with all three projects but have realized that there are so many differences that the net/web cannot pin down accurately enough. Thanks in advance, finding that this is a great site for info and the building is an exciting task. Can't wait to fire up my first amp!
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