I've been looking at the schematic for a Gibson GA-20 RVT guitar amp, and I'm puzzled by (at least) one aspect of the design.
It uses a transformer phase inverter driven by one 12AU7 section, but it appears to me that the secondary of the PI transformer is loaded only by the stray/interelectrode capacitance of the 6BQ5 control grids. Put another way, it seems to me that, in terms of reflected impedance, it would look like almost an infinite load, raising the question of what kind of plate load the 12AU7 is seeing on the primary side.
As a Hammond tech, I work with transformer phase inverters all the time, but there are usually grid leak resistors on the driven tubes, providing a defined load resistance.
In terms of the GA-20, is it a matter of bad design, or is there something about transformer phase inverters I don't fully understand?
ga20rvt.pdf
It uses a transformer phase inverter driven by one 12AU7 section, but it appears to me that the secondary of the PI transformer is loaded only by the stray/interelectrode capacitance of the 6BQ5 control grids. Put another way, it seems to me that, in terms of reflected impedance, it would look like almost an infinite load, raising the question of what kind of plate load the 12AU7 is seeing on the primary side.
As a Hammond tech, I work with transformer phase inverters all the time, but there are usually grid leak resistors on the driven tubes, providing a defined load resistance.
In terms of the GA-20, is it a matter of bad design, or is there something about transformer phase inverters I don't fully understand?
ga20rvt.pdf
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