Parallel does reduce noise to a certain degree and have other virtues. I never argue about that. Some people just insist on getting 3dB noise reduction, that is absolutely false. That's the whole point I am driving at.
In noise reduction design, anything happen in the plate region is much less critical, reducing the plate resistance only give minor improvement. The major problem is the input stop resistor, the grid current. Stop resistor does not change, grid current likely double. This alone increases the noise regardless of the gain increase of the parallel triodes.
People need to realize NOT EVERY NOISE SOURCE IS REDUCED WHEN THE GAIN GOES UP, THAT IS JUST WRONG. The above two major noise source is gain independent already!!!
Only flicker noise in the plate circuit get reduced if the gain goes up, any flicker noise source in the grid circuit is.......AGAIN, GAIN INDEPENDENT.
People really need to read noise calculation. Again, read post #13, #18 and #19!!!! Don't want to take my word, Google noise!!! Hundreds of articles showing you how to model and calculating noise. None easy, but they pretty much doing the same thing in the article and in post #19. I did not invent this, this is common knowledge, anyone design low noise circuit HAS to know what I am talking about.
For guitar amp,
1) Eliminate the 68K grid stop resistor,
2) Find a preamp tube that has the lowest grid current and low input flicker noise.
3) Put a cap to limit the frequency either at the input or the first stage to limit to 5KHz. You'll be way way ahead of the game.
This, you can take it to the bank. then you can talk about parallel tubes.
In noise reduction design, anything happen in the plate region is much less critical, reducing the plate resistance only give minor improvement. The major problem is the input stop resistor, the grid current. Stop resistor does not change, grid current likely double. This alone increases the noise regardless of the gain increase of the parallel triodes.
People need to realize NOT EVERY NOISE SOURCE IS REDUCED WHEN THE GAIN GOES UP, THAT IS JUST WRONG. The above two major noise source is gain independent already!!!
Only flicker noise in the plate circuit get reduced if the gain goes up, any flicker noise source in the grid circuit is.......AGAIN, GAIN INDEPENDENT.
People really need to read noise calculation. Again, read post #13, #18 and #19!!!! Don't want to take my word, Google noise!!! Hundreds of articles showing you how to model and calculating noise. None easy, but they pretty much doing the same thing in the article and in post #19. I did not invent this, this is common knowledge, anyone design low noise circuit HAS to know what I am talking about.
For guitar amp,
1) Eliminate the 68K grid stop resistor,
2) Find a preamp tube that has the lowest grid current and low input flicker noise.
3) Put a cap to limit the frequency either at the input or the first stage to limit to 5KHz. You'll be way way ahead of the game.
This, you can take it to the bank. then you can talk about parallel tubes.
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