I "think" I remember reading(from a fairly trusted source) that mv type probes are safer to use. The reasoning was that ma probes run the risk of inducing oscillation?in some amps or something to that affect? Maybe I was dreaming...thoughts? Thanks in advance Bob
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Bias probes- ma vs. mv ?
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Pretty much. Milivolt bias probes put a 1ohm resistor in series with the cathode, and we use Ohm's law to calculate bias current. Miliamp bias probe put your DMMs amp circuit in series with the cathode, and since you've got alot of wire between the socket and ground, you can get oscillations, though I've never had a problem with them.-Mike
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Originally posted by defaced View PostPretty much. Milivolt bias probes put a 1ohm resistor in series with the cathode, and we use Ohm's law to calculate bias current. Miliamp bias probe put your DMMs amp circuit in series with the cathode, and since you've got alot of wire between the socket and ground, you can get oscillations, though I've never had a problem with them.
Might of been a coincidence but I remember reading an old post from John Philips? about ma probes and possible oscillation. Time to get a mv probe. Anybody know a good place to get one? Thanks Bob"Reality is an illusion albeit a very persistant one " Albert Einstein
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Originally posted by rockon1 View PostTime to get a mv probe. Anybody know a good place to get one?
Now when you bias, connect your meter between ground and the test point. 1mV = 1ma for a 1 ohm resistor. You can use a ten ohm 1%, and get 10mV/ma if you like. Neither will cause any bad effect in your circuit's normal operations. Use a 2W or 3W metal oxide type resistor. The current needed to dissipate 2W in a 1 ohm resistor is 2W/1R = 1A. For a ten ohm, 2W requires 2W/10R = 200ma.
They may get hot at these currents (really only an issue with the 10R) but they will not fail. You could go to 5W 1% wirewound if you use tens if you like extra safe.
Once you put the resistors in, if you make your bias adjusters available from the back panel too, you can (re) bias without taking the amp apart. Might as well put a bias pot per tube and save needing matched pairs as well.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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FWIW I use 2 x 0.6W 2R 1% in parallel for each cathode. That's plenty (1.2W) and theoretically is 0.5% tolerant.Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)
"I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo
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Originally posted by tubeswell View Post... and theoretically is 0.5% tolerant.
None of which is a problem. 1% is a good enough tolerance for setting bias.
Here in the USA, Mouser electronics stocks several 1 ohm 1% 3W resistors for between US$0.50 and $1.00.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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Or just measure the voltage drop across the OT and calculate the current, which gives you plate current which is what you need anyway. I've got a bias probe, but I can't tel you the last ime I used it, the OT method is far simpler, and more accurate.
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Originally posted by hasserl View PostOr just measure the voltage drop across the OT and calculate the current, which gives you plate current which is what you need anyway. I've got a bias probe, but I can't tel you the last ime I used it, the OT method is far simpler, and more accurate.
The OT-voltage-drop method is pretty much the same as the inserted-resistor method, except that you're using the OT's resistance, whatever it is, as the measurement resistor. Both work fine, with some caveats.
The OT method measures plate current only, and you get to hook both meter probes up to the B+ voltage potential. An inserted resistor between B+ and the tube plate does the same thing, but now you don't necessarily have to use whatever resistance the winding has. A resistor inserted in the cathode lead reads the plate plus screen current, and both leads are nearly at ground potential.
I'm with you on the "don't have to get out the bias probe" thing. That's why I pop in measurement resistors in the cathode in all my amps. Doesn't help much if you'll never see the amp again, but mine, I can spend the initial time to do the measurement resistors.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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Originally posted by R.G. View PostActually, no. It's still 1% tolerance. Both resistors can be 1% high, both can be 1% low, and you have no way of telling that a priori. If the actual distribution of values in the 1% resistors is normal, using two at a time has the same distribution.
None of which is a problem. 1% is a good enough tolerance for setting bias.
Here in the USA, Mouser electronics stocks several 1 ohm 1% 3W resistors for between US$0.50 and $1.00.Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)
"I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo
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Originally posted by tedmich View Posttip jacks work well for the bias points, insulated ones from Mouser (105-0802-001 Red/105-0803-001 Black) are only 0.66 each and take a DMM probe tip quite well (paperclips too so avoid 5 yr olds!)
It's also a good reason to vote for the cathode resistors. On a fully screaming amplifier, a 1 ohm cathode resistor only gets up to well under a volt on the sense point. It's substantially at ground; won't hurt it to be shorted to chassis, either.
... like I'd have done with the other end of my paperclip.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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Originally posted by R.G. View PostThat brought back some of my earliest "self-teaching moments"!
It's also a good reason to vote for the cathode resistors. On a fully screaming amplifier, a 1 ohm cathode resistor only gets up to well under a volt on the sense point. It's substantially at ground; won't hurt it to be shorted to chassis, either.
... like I'd have done with the other end of my paperclip.
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1 ohm, 10 ohm. Wattage needed
1 ohm resistor, with 300ma to 500ma across it, is handling only .09 of a watt to 1/4 watt.
I think a 1/2 watt resistor is OK and a 1 watter is over kill.
I reality, I rarely use anything other then a 1 watt resistor for current sensing on the cathode lead of 6V6s, 6L6s or El34s.
1 ohm@1% resistors are very easy to find and fit the bill with lots of overhead.
Now, 10 ohm resistor changes things.
It would need to be a 1 watter at 300ma, so I'd use a 2 watter.... and to handle 500ma, I'd be looking at a 3 to 5 watter.
However, there aren't many amps that are pulling 300ma to 500ma per single power tube anyhow!!
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If you use 1 ohm resistors to sense the cathode current, to figure out your bias percentage of the max, you still need to know the plate voltage right? So you still have to pull the chassis unless you add a tip pin jack with a divider there to bring the plate voltage down to a safe level, or use a meter like the Bias Rite, which can tell you both the plate voltage and the cathode current. For my own amps I sometimes add the tip pin jacks, but I include a divider to get the plate voltage down to a safe level....say 45v instead of 450v for example. For customer amps the Bias Rite is the ticket usually.
Are there any other suggested approaches or are you guys just going by cathode current alone when you set the bias via tip pin jacks?
Greg
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Originally posted by soundmasterg View PostIf you use 1 ohm resistors to sense the cathode current, to figure out your bias percentage of the max, you still need to know the plate voltage right?
If you ever bias an amp a second time, you can usually already know (b), so you don't need to measure it every time, unless you're really, really fussy. They're going to drift anyway, so my personal take is that you don't need to measure B+ more than once if you get it right. I personally also view the "percent of max dissipation" as a bit of gilding that can usually be dispensed with; in fact, it's usually contained in the "get it right once" setup. After that, you're looking for a current number.
For my own amps I sometimes add the tip pin jacks, but I include a divider to get the plate voltage down to a safe level....say 45v instead of 450v for example.
For customer amps the Bias Rite is the ticket usually.
Are there any other suggested approaches or are you guys just going by cathode current alone when you set the bias via tip pin jacks?
Hey! How about this? A uC with A-D conversion inside it, where it reads the cathode current and the divided down plate voltage, so it can on-the-fly do the math and tell you if you have it right! Better, it can self adjust the bias to be either at cathode-current priority or percent of max, selectably. Better, it could sense when the amp had been turned on, mute the output, bias the tubes, and have a fresh, correct bias each power-on, or whenever the bias-me-now button was pushed.
I've done exactly that. Worked fine, but was impractical because the tubes heated and drifted slowly enough that the amp was quiet for too long when biased. Not practical for live playing.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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