Just got an old RCA amp the other day, no schematic looked everywhere including here...
Things were going well tonight testing, and I actually got to play through it for about a half hour, but with one caveat, the whole time the amp was running through my light bulb limiter, so the wall voltage was lower. I decided to run it straight to the wall and measure the plate voltages and current through the output transformer and I was shocked to find one tube with a 406vdc plate voltage, while the other was down around 354vdc. I checked the voltage drop between the center tap and each tube, and lets just say there was a HUGE difference, so I quickly got out my infrared temp gun and the tube with the low plate voltage and big voltage drop was 538 degrees Fahrenheit, while the other was 200 degrees.
Now here's the weird thing, I ran the amp once again through the Light bulb AC voltage short detector and both plate voltages were identical and both tubes close in temperature.
I substituted another tube in place of the "hot" one, same thing. The output transformer is a brand new Classic Industries one, and it wasn't hot.
No schematic, but here's a pic of the underbelly of the amp. I couldn't measure the ohms on those big violet/blue (resistors ?) that were connected to the screens, so I cut them out, and just ran voltage to the screens on a second node coming after the first 40uf cap from the rectifier (replaced that cap), and then another 30uf cap to ground. That yields around 292vdc for the screens, at least through the light bulb short protection.
Any ideas ? Thanks.
EDIT #1 : Put a JJ 6L6 in place of the one super heating tube socket, and now it appears to be behaving even at the 125vac wall voltage, but... I think the 180 ohm cathode bias resistor is way to low, as one tube has a plate dissipation of 33.2 watts ! while the other is a more acceptable but still high 26.6 watts. I will straighten this out and see if it helps.
EDIT #2 : Put a larger resistance between the B+ and screen nodes (now 2 x 5.6k = 11.2k) and screen voltage is back down to 33.2vdc. All seems well with the one JJ tube. I think I was just pushing the RCA tubes too hard, as the wall voltages are a lot more than when this amp was first built, around 1948.
Still if anyone has an idea about anything else that may be an issue, I am all ears ! and thanks once again !!!
Things were going well tonight testing, and I actually got to play through it for about a half hour, but with one caveat, the whole time the amp was running through my light bulb limiter, so the wall voltage was lower. I decided to run it straight to the wall and measure the plate voltages and current through the output transformer and I was shocked to find one tube with a 406vdc plate voltage, while the other was down around 354vdc. I checked the voltage drop between the center tap and each tube, and lets just say there was a HUGE difference, so I quickly got out my infrared temp gun and the tube with the low plate voltage and big voltage drop was 538 degrees Fahrenheit, while the other was 200 degrees.
Now here's the weird thing, I ran the amp once again through the Light bulb AC voltage short detector and both plate voltages were identical and both tubes close in temperature.
I substituted another tube in place of the "hot" one, same thing. The output transformer is a brand new Classic Industries one, and it wasn't hot.
No schematic, but here's a pic of the underbelly of the amp. I couldn't measure the ohms on those big violet/blue (resistors ?) that were connected to the screens, so I cut them out, and just ran voltage to the screens on a second node coming after the first 40uf cap from the rectifier (replaced that cap), and then another 30uf cap to ground. That yields around 292vdc for the screens, at least through the light bulb short protection.
Any ideas ? Thanks.
EDIT #1 : Put a JJ 6L6 in place of the one super heating tube socket, and now it appears to be behaving even at the 125vac wall voltage, but... I think the 180 ohm cathode bias resistor is way to low, as one tube has a plate dissipation of 33.2 watts ! while the other is a more acceptable but still high 26.6 watts. I will straighten this out and see if it helps.
EDIT #2 : Put a larger resistance between the B+ and screen nodes (now 2 x 5.6k = 11.2k) and screen voltage is back down to 33.2vdc. All seems well with the one JJ tube. I think I was just pushing the RCA tubes too hard, as the wall voltages are a lot more than when this amp was first built, around 1948.
Still if anyone has an idea about anything else that may be an issue, I am all ears ! and thanks once again !!!
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