In my never ending messing around with the super twin reverb, I installed 1ohm resistors between the 6L6GC cathodes and ground to measure how much current is going through the cathode.
My readings are pretty weird though, much colder then expected.
I'm getting 509 volts on the plates.
Looking at the amp from the front, left to right, I'm seeing 20, 20, 18, 18, 19 and 19 ma of current through the cathodes at idle. That would be a hair over 10 watts of static dissipation per tube (509 * .020ma) - seems like it's running very cold.
The bias is fixed using a 2.7K resistor on the bias balance pot.
Is the amp setup this way due to the high voltage on the plates and screen? I'm hesitant to adjust the bias as it might be this way by design. Anyone have any info on this?
FWIW, I'm getting some great tone out of it with some of the mods and tweaks I've done recently - there is a twin reverb in the super twin, but you have to work at it a bit to find it!
My readings are pretty weird though, much colder then expected.
I'm getting 509 volts on the plates.
Looking at the amp from the front, left to right, I'm seeing 20, 20, 18, 18, 19 and 19 ma of current through the cathodes at idle. That would be a hair over 10 watts of static dissipation per tube (509 * .020ma) - seems like it's running very cold.
The bias is fixed using a 2.7K resistor on the bias balance pot.
Is the amp setup this way due to the high voltage on the plates and screen? I'm hesitant to adjust the bias as it might be this way by design. Anyone have any info on this?
FWIW, I'm getting some great tone out of it with some of the mods and tweaks I've done recently - there is a twin reverb in the super twin, but you have to work at it a bit to find it!
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