I have a Kent Model A-60 amp here, I'm guessing built sometime in the '60s. Unfortunately, no schematic. My tube tester showed the 5Y3 rectifier as very weak so I popped in a brand new one. Indeed the plate voltage on the 6BQ5/EL84 power tubes went up by about 50 volts. That put the plate current draw over spec so I want to bring the bias down. I'm used to seeing the cathodes connected either directly to ground in a fixed bias amp or via a resistor in a cathode biased design. In the case of this Kent amp I see neither, in fact the cathodes are commonly connected to the one of the heater pins. The heater supply is 6.3V AC and the DC voltage on the cathodes is 9VDC. I'm curious where that 9VDC comes from. But more importantly, if I wanted to reduce the bias level on those tubes would I have to get rid of that cathode/heater connection and connect the cathodes to ground via an appropriately valued resistor to get a more positive voltage on the cathode?
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