Hey guys, just finished building a Princeton Reverb clone and having a few biasing issues. It's completely stock, with the only differences to an original blackface PR being the power transformer... I used the Heyboer equivalent of the Deluxe Reverb PT... #TP40D from Allen Amps order page.
Initially after building I was getting 380v on the plates, I had a pair of crappy Russian 6V6's in at the time and I wasn't sure what they were biased at, just put them in to test. Since then I changed one resistor and a cap in the reverb mixing circuit to lessen the reverb amount and added 1ohm resistors from cathode to ground to more easily read the bias. Now I am reading 437v on the plates with 22mA cathode current. I have 119.7VAC from the wall and I am using a NOS GE 5U4GB rect. What would cause this rise? Did I have the bias way off before when I couldn't read it and it pulled the plate voltage down?
And is a 440 plate voltage something to worry about? Can I still get away with using a pair of Tungsol 6V6GTA's at these conditions?
Initially after building I was getting 380v on the plates, I had a pair of crappy Russian 6V6's in at the time and I wasn't sure what they were biased at, just put them in to test. Since then I changed one resistor and a cap in the reverb mixing circuit to lessen the reverb amount and added 1ohm resistors from cathode to ground to more easily read the bias. Now I am reading 437v on the plates with 22mA cathode current. I have 119.7VAC from the wall and I am using a NOS GE 5U4GB rect. What would cause this rise? Did I have the bias way off before when I couldn't read it and it pulled the plate voltage down?
And is a 440 plate voltage something to worry about? Can I still get away with using a pair of Tungsol 6V6GTA's at these conditions?
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