I propose a Tube Tech-Argue-A-Thon to celebrate the return of KG! Here's my contribution:
I was never convinced about the benefits of driving audio pentode and beam tetrode tubes into AB2. They weren't designed for it. I always got the impression that you would burn out the control grids (which seem to have a pathetically small dissipation rating in these tubes) before you ever got much extra power out of them. You could probably get the same power boost more easily by raising the screen voltage and staying in AB1.
I got a shock when I first saw that pair of back-to-back diodes clamping the input signal to the Ampeg SVT's power section. I thought at first it was designed to be heavily overdriven right into grid current. But I guess someone at Ampeg might have come to a similar conclusion to what I mentioned above.
However, I think an advantage of the cathode follower circuit is that it might stop the coupling capacitors from pumping up due to the output stage grid current and causing the amp to do what I think of as "farting out". I guess it can do that even if it can't drive the output tubes into grid current. The zener trick described earlier achieves the same thing.
I say if you're itching to drive something into grid current, you should use a hefty triode that's designed for it. Discuss
I was never convinced about the benefits of driving audio pentode and beam tetrode tubes into AB2. They weren't designed for it. I always got the impression that you would burn out the control grids (which seem to have a pathetically small dissipation rating in these tubes) before you ever got much extra power out of them. You could probably get the same power boost more easily by raising the screen voltage and staying in AB1.
I got a shock when I first saw that pair of back-to-back diodes clamping the input signal to the Ampeg SVT's power section. I thought at first it was designed to be heavily overdriven right into grid current. But I guess someone at Ampeg might have come to a similar conclusion to what I mentioned above.
However, I think an advantage of the cathode follower circuit is that it might stop the coupling capacitors from pumping up due to the output stage grid current and causing the amp to do what I think of as "farting out". I guess it can do that even if it can't drive the output tubes into grid current. The zener trick described earlier achieves the same thing.
I say if you're itching to drive something into grid current, you should use a hefty triode that's designed for it. Discuss

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