Ok, I am totally stumped as to how a rectifier tube takes the high voltage (360v+) from the transformer to pins 4 & 6, which I understand to be the plates, and the second (5v) tap to the heater/cathode on pins 2 & 8 and pumps 360v+ out of one lead of what appears to be the low voltage section of the tube on pin 8? With diodes you're running both B+ through a diode which then goes to the common B+ feed for the caps and other parts of the circuit. With a tube rectifier the B+ doesn't touch the common B+ circuit physically.
This makes no sense to me. How can you get B+ of over 3xx volts from a section of the tube that runs on a 5v supply? Does that make sense or did I not word my question correctly?
I read an explanation on another site but it still doesn't make sense.
This makes no sense to me. How can you get B+ of over 3xx volts from a section of the tube that runs on a 5v supply? Does that make sense or did I not word my question correctly?
I read an explanation on another site but it still doesn't make sense.
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