i recently posted about this elsewhere but the thread became so confusing i had to try here with a clean slate after learning what i have so far. I cathode biased my EL34 amp and it redplated a bit. Not bad, but a bit. I was using two 270 ohm resistors, one per tube. I did this because two amps i have copied or studied to some degree, the matchless chieftain and the hotcat both use a 270R per tube. I finally realized that with one per tube it was the same as using one for both tubes at half the value. in other words, a 270 on each cathode was like using a single 135 tied to both cathodes. So i figured no wonder it redplated. However, before i realized that i stayed with a seperate R per tube but increased them. i ended up at about 450R on each tube. the high gain tone was unreal. i mean, i know i've said i had great tone before, but this was insane. I had 2 players try it. one who is a world class player and they both flipped.
Now hopefully that all sunk in because it may get more confusing. At that point i was told i was likely getting very low output. So i tried a separate R tied to both tubes cathodes. I used a 270R. The amp got a LOT louder and cleaner and that unreal hig gain tone went right out the window. It still sounds good.....about like a good JCM800, but that amazing gain tone was lost big time. This is where i get really confused and need an answer. If i was correct in that using 2 resistors, one per tube would be the same as using a single R of 1/2 the value of either of the two R's, then changing from the two 450R's i had with that killer tone to a single 270 tied to both tubes should have given me the same specs. But not only was it way louder, but that unbelievably spongy and rich tone was gone.
Can anyone explain this to me in a clear way? Is there something about using seperate R's on each tube that makes for a very different much richer distortion, and even if thats true, why would using a single R make it so much louder if i halved the value? Is that clear? I'm trying to figure out how to get the output up like it was with the single 270 but retain the complexity i have with a 450R on each tube.
Now hopefully that all sunk in because it may get more confusing. At that point i was told i was likely getting very low output. So i tried a separate R tied to both tubes cathodes. I used a 270R. The amp got a LOT louder and cleaner and that unreal hig gain tone went right out the window. It still sounds good.....about like a good JCM800, but that amazing gain tone was lost big time. This is where i get really confused and need an answer. If i was correct in that using 2 resistors, one per tube would be the same as using a single R of 1/2 the value of either of the two R's, then changing from the two 450R's i had with that killer tone to a single 270 tied to both tubes should have given me the same specs. But not only was it way louder, but that unbelievably spongy and rich tone was gone.
Can anyone explain this to me in a clear way? Is there something about using seperate R's on each tube that makes for a very different much richer distortion, and even if thats true, why would using a single R make it so much louder if i halved the value? Is that clear? I'm trying to figure out how to get the output up like it was with the single 270 but retain the complexity i have with a 450R on each tube.
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