I have this old no-name "frankenstein" 4x6L6 amp that I want to use 6V6s with. The 6L6s are way too boomy and especially at practice volumes are not easily tamed. I dropped in two pairs of 6V6s straight in with no mods and it sounds fine, there wasn't even redplating as long as I could tell so I know that this conversion is realistic. Also the OT is HUGE so that shouldn't be an issue. However I also know that these tubes are running WAY too hot (400 plate voltage @ almost 39mA, that's 110% dissipation!).
Like I said this amp is a 'frankenstein', there's no brand name or serial numbers anywhere, plus it's all 1960s sloppy point-to-point wired so even following traces within the amp is difficult. Hence I can't quite determine if it's fixed or cathode biased. Obviously there's no bias pot of any sort, and there's these huge 300 ohm/25W ceramic resistors + 22uF/50V caps on the cathode (P8) of each power tube pair. There's also a 'half-power' switch (I can't quite figure out how it works, it seems to just disconnect the cathode pairs from each other) which I believe I've read is only possible with cathode biased amps.
First of all, is this in fact a cathode biased amp? Is there any other way to tell? Ideally I would like to have adjustable bias on this amplifier, is this possible without total re-engineering of the output section? Lastly, if adjustable bias is not an option, how to I determine the correct cathode resistor value to bring the plate current within reasonable range for a 6V6 (24.5 mA +/- 2mA)?
Thanks
Like I said this amp is a 'frankenstein', there's no brand name or serial numbers anywhere, plus it's all 1960s sloppy point-to-point wired so even following traces within the amp is difficult. Hence I can't quite determine if it's fixed or cathode biased. Obviously there's no bias pot of any sort, and there's these huge 300 ohm/25W ceramic resistors + 22uF/50V caps on the cathode (P8) of each power tube pair. There's also a 'half-power' switch (I can't quite figure out how it works, it seems to just disconnect the cathode pairs from each other) which I believe I've read is only possible with cathode biased amps.
First of all, is this in fact a cathode biased amp? Is there any other way to tell? Ideally I would like to have adjustable bias on this amplifier, is this possible without total re-engineering of the output section? Lastly, if adjustable bias is not an option, how to I determine the correct cathode resistor value to bring the plate current within reasonable range for a 6V6 (24.5 mA +/- 2mA)?
Thanks
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