I built a slightly tweaked version of Merlin's 12au7 constant current reverb driver circuit... the results were excellent IMO, but I have a question.
He (and others) state that the driver needs to have an output impedance of 10X the input impedance of the tank to approximate a constant current source. In his example, he has 2 X 12AU7 in parallel with a 22K anode load and a 22K series resistor driving a 1.5-1.9K reverb tank.
Wouldn't the output impedance of the amp stage also count towards the total constant current impedance? Could you use an amp with a higher output impedance and reduce the value of the series resistor?
Furthermore (general tube theory question) how is it possible for a gain stage to have a lower output impedance than the value of the plate/anode resistor? I mean, there's no way the circuit can source more current than whatever the maximum possible current deliverable by B+ in series with the plate resistor to ground. I understand that the Rp of the tube is usually far less than the value of the plate resistor, so I guess that can pull the AVERAGE output impedance down... but it seems like it's dramatically different for sinking versus sourcing current. Am I dead wrong here?
Nathan
He (and others) state that the driver needs to have an output impedance of 10X the input impedance of the tank to approximate a constant current source. In his example, he has 2 X 12AU7 in parallel with a 22K anode load and a 22K series resistor driving a 1.5-1.9K reverb tank.
Wouldn't the output impedance of the amp stage also count towards the total constant current impedance? Could you use an amp with a higher output impedance and reduce the value of the series resistor?
Furthermore (general tube theory question) how is it possible for a gain stage to have a lower output impedance than the value of the plate/anode resistor? I mean, there's no way the circuit can source more current than whatever the maximum possible current deliverable by B+ in series with the plate resistor to ground. I understand that the Rp of the tube is usually far less than the value of the plate resistor, so I guess that can pull the AVERAGE output impedance down... but it seems like it's dramatically different for sinking versus sourcing current. Am I dead wrong here?
Nathan
Comment