Hello all, long time reader-first time poster.
First, let me start by thanking everyone for their great help. I probably have an easy question but here goes.
I was given a few old Alamo Montclair and Electra amplifiers that are 40+ years old. My friend asked me to work on them. I've fixed the various hum, scratchy pot, normal wear and tear that an amp of that age would have.
However, my friend doesn't know how old the 6v6 power tubes are. I think they were purchased off the bay not working. They work now, however, there bias is completely off.
I hope I'm clear as mud here. Here goes.
Several of the amps have issues with very low volumes considering what they should be at. Let's use the Montclair Reverb as this example. Cathode bias. 2 6v6's, 1 12ax7 phase splitter, preamp section.
I measure the following:
Pin 3 (plate) = 236 v
Pin 8 (cathode) = 10.41 v
Cathode resistor = 190 ohms
Pin 4 (screen) = 210 v
Screen resistor = 15.38 kilohm's
Ok, so the math... 10.41/190 = 0.05479 A or 54.79mA
54.79mA / 2 = 27.395 mA per tube (shared cathode resistor)
0.027395 * 236 = 6.47 watts per tube
Is my math above correct?
Without power tubes I read 360 v on plate and 360v on screen.
I've tried another matched pair and get 5.95 watts based on similar math above.
I am correct that when a pair of power tubes are cathode bias'ed and they share a common cathode resistor you divide the mA by 2, correct?
Could this simply be because the tubes are so old?? They say... errr what is readable anyway say RCA on them.
Would a 6v6 really drop the plate voltage from 360v (with no tube) to 236v (with tube)?
Thanks for your help. If something is obvious or I am making a noob mistake, I apologize.
Matt
First, let me start by thanking everyone for their great help. I probably have an easy question but here goes.
I was given a few old Alamo Montclair and Electra amplifiers that are 40+ years old. My friend asked me to work on them. I've fixed the various hum, scratchy pot, normal wear and tear that an amp of that age would have.
However, my friend doesn't know how old the 6v6 power tubes are. I think they were purchased off the bay not working. They work now, however, there bias is completely off.
I hope I'm clear as mud here. Here goes.
Several of the amps have issues with very low volumes considering what they should be at. Let's use the Montclair Reverb as this example. Cathode bias. 2 6v6's, 1 12ax7 phase splitter, preamp section.
I measure the following:
Pin 3 (plate) = 236 v
Pin 8 (cathode) = 10.41 v
Cathode resistor = 190 ohms
Pin 4 (screen) = 210 v
Screen resistor = 15.38 kilohm's
Ok, so the math... 10.41/190 = 0.05479 A or 54.79mA
54.79mA / 2 = 27.395 mA per tube (shared cathode resistor)
0.027395 * 236 = 6.47 watts per tube
Is my math above correct?
Without power tubes I read 360 v on plate and 360v on screen.
I've tried another matched pair and get 5.95 watts based on similar math above.
I am correct that when a pair of power tubes are cathode bias'ed and they share a common cathode resistor you divide the mA by 2, correct?
Could this simply be because the tubes are so old?? They say... errr what is readable anyway say RCA on them.
Would a 6v6 really drop the plate voltage from 360v (with no tube) to 236v (with tube)?
Thanks for your help. If something is obvious or I am making a noob mistake, I apologize.
Matt
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