Yeah, I'm back with this old idea that's haunting me! Using a pair of EL84 and a pair of 6L6 in the same amp!
The biggest problem to me was matching the primary of the OT, but then it occured to me that:
- the Vox AC15 uses a 6.6K output impedance (vs the typical 8K for EL84s)
- you can run a pair of 6L6 with a lower B+ in a 6.6K impedance too, like people putting 6L6s in their 5E3!
So since we have a pair of each, we divide 6.6 by two which give 3.3Kohms.
Hey! The Hammond 1750N (Marshall 50W) OT that I love in my Marshall clone is 3.4Kohms! Close enough for rock 'n roll.
So let's accept that we will need to use lower voltage than we would typically use with 6L6s and run this thing pretty low. The Vox AC30 runs on 320V, let's use that.
And let's run the EL84 cathode-biased... again like the Vox, but use fixed-bias for the 6L6 (we split after the PI to the two power amp lines, caps will block the bias signal from reaching the EL84s). That'll help us keep as much voltage as we can for the 6L6s.
Judging from the data sheets, I am expecting between 40 and 45W of total output power. Care will have to be taken to evenly divide the signal accross the two pairs, but I'm basically hoping the EL84 will overdrive first, the idea being to keep a tight and firm low-end from the 6L6 while the EL84 are generating their nice harmonics! With the EL84 high gain, that should be easy.
Do I have the math right here?
2 cathode bias EL84
2 fixed bias 6L6
320V B+
3.3-3.4KOhms output primaries
Under 50W of output
The biggest problem to me was matching the primary of the OT, but then it occured to me that:
- the Vox AC15 uses a 6.6K output impedance (vs the typical 8K for EL84s)
- you can run a pair of 6L6 with a lower B+ in a 6.6K impedance too, like people putting 6L6s in their 5E3!
So since we have a pair of each, we divide 6.6 by two which give 3.3Kohms.
Hey! The Hammond 1750N (Marshall 50W) OT that I love in my Marshall clone is 3.4Kohms! Close enough for rock 'n roll.
So let's accept that we will need to use lower voltage than we would typically use with 6L6s and run this thing pretty low. The Vox AC30 runs on 320V, let's use that.
And let's run the EL84 cathode-biased... again like the Vox, but use fixed-bias for the 6L6 (we split after the PI to the two power amp lines, caps will block the bias signal from reaching the EL84s). That'll help us keep as much voltage as we can for the 6L6s.
Judging from the data sheets, I am expecting between 40 and 45W of total output power. Care will have to be taken to evenly divide the signal accross the two pairs, but I'm basically hoping the EL84 will overdrive first, the idea being to keep a tight and firm low-end from the 6L6 while the EL84 are generating their nice harmonics! With the EL84 high gain, that should be easy.
Do I have the math right here?
2 cathode bias EL84
2 fixed bias 6L6
320V B+
3.3-3.4KOhms output primaries
Under 50W of output
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