My understanding of parallel triodes is that they provide a reduction of noise relative to the signal through that stage because the signals will combine in phase and reinforce one another as they are correlated, but since the noise through each triode isn't correlated, the noise signals will cancel each other out partially. Sounds like a great idea for an input stage on an amp you want to be nice and quiet.
The parallel triode setups I've seen in schematics have shown both cathodes and plates tied together, sharing a common resistor at each point. What if you were to leave the plates tied together, but to separate the cathodes, and bias/bypass on each one different? Since the two signals would no longer be correlated, I'd think you'd loose the noise reduction effect, but what about tone shaping?
If you were put a larger bypass cap on one of the cathodes for fat bass and a small one on the other for bright highs while keeping the bias resistors the same, when the two triodes sum their signals together at the plate resistor, what would be the effect? Fatter bass than both cathodes having or sharing the bright cap but not as fat as it would be with both cathodes having or sharing a fat cap? Or would the difference in capacitors cause phase shift problems through the parallel triodes that made for a weird/bad phasey/flangey sound?
What about if bypass caps were held the same but the bias points were different. Let's take a setup with one triode set a little warmer than center bias and the other set a little colder Since each triode is running over a different range of it operating characteristic the two signals are going to be distorted slightly different, with different harmonic distortion. Since the harmonic distortion would be different through each stage, would this cause the distortion to be reduced when the signals combine back together, making for a cleaner, blander signal? or since each triode is compressing differently, would this increase the harmonic distortion through the stage?
The parallel triode setups I've seen in schematics have shown both cathodes and plates tied together, sharing a common resistor at each point. What if you were to leave the plates tied together, but to separate the cathodes, and bias/bypass on each one different? Since the two signals would no longer be correlated, I'd think you'd loose the noise reduction effect, but what about tone shaping?
If you were put a larger bypass cap on one of the cathodes for fat bass and a small one on the other for bright highs while keeping the bias resistors the same, when the two triodes sum their signals together at the plate resistor, what would be the effect? Fatter bass than both cathodes having or sharing the bright cap but not as fat as it would be with both cathodes having or sharing a fat cap? Or would the difference in capacitors cause phase shift problems through the parallel triodes that made for a weird/bad phasey/flangey sound?
What about if bypass caps were held the same but the bias points were different. Let's take a setup with one triode set a little warmer than center bias and the other set a little colder Since each triode is running over a different range of it operating characteristic the two signals are going to be distorted slightly different, with different harmonic distortion. Since the harmonic distortion would be different through each stage, would this cause the distortion to be reduced when the signals combine back together, making for a cleaner, blander signal? or since each triode is compressing differently, would this increase the harmonic distortion through the stage?
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