That Turner circuit looks like a generic totem pole. Sure, the tubes are stacked in the drawing but overall the setup looks like a generic push-pull pair of cathode followers, rather than a push-pull pair of cascoded common cathode amps with load on the plates.... or even push pull pair of cascoded cathode followers.
Yep, this circuit does halve the voltage across each tube. But that's because one tube is pulling while the other is pushing. In fact, the voltage at the output node modulates between the HT rail and zero volts, crossing over at approximately half of HT. There aren't two cascaded tubes pulling while two other cascaded tubes would be pushing. I'm not sure if that is exactly what OT was aiming for. I had an impression he wants to take a rather standard topology and replace a single device with a cascode of two or several devices.
Cascode as circuit, yeah that works. Sure- It's ancient and examples are legion. In certain circuits converting something that theoretically seems doable to practice however just introduces a lot of excessive issues and complexity.
Maybe if you replace one of the devices in the cascode with solid-state it could be made with less hassle. That was common in RF designs, and in designs inspired by them, like Music Man amps. But the purpose in that case was really different so I'm not sure if that example is overly applicable to this topic.
Yep, this circuit does halve the voltage across each tube. But that's because one tube is pulling while the other is pushing. In fact, the voltage at the output node modulates between the HT rail and zero volts, crossing over at approximately half of HT. There aren't two cascaded tubes pulling while two other cascaded tubes would be pushing. I'm not sure if that is exactly what OT was aiming for. I had an impression he wants to take a rather standard topology and replace a single device with a cascode of two or several devices.
Cascode as circuit, yeah that works. Sure- It's ancient and examples are legion. In certain circuits converting something that theoretically seems doable to practice however just introduces a lot of excessive issues and complexity.
Maybe if you replace one of the devices in the cascode with solid-state it could be made with less hassle. That was common in RF designs, and in designs inspired by them, like Music Man amps. But the purpose in that case was really different so I'm not sure if that example is overly applicable to this topic.
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