Originally posted by g1
View Post
In the case of the PV Classic 30 I can't tell if they did that on purpose or by accident. I can imagine the case where someone said, "OK let's scale this push-pull pair amp up to a dual pair configuration." Then somebody either drew the schematic wrong, or did the assembly wrong, and an amp that had screen resistors on one pair but not on the other made it to production. I'm guessing it could be a chicken-egg thing. If that topology was derived from a misteak, was it a mistake in drawing the schematic that caused the assembly guys to get it wrong, or was it an error in assembly in the prototype lab, and someone just drew up the schematic to match the prototype? Serendipity has a lot to do with discoveries, and I'm not sure whether the Peavey design was intentional or accidental. What we do know is that they decided to keep the design.
We also know that Randall Smith filed for a patent for his fixed-bias "Simul-Class" design, where one PP pair would be run in "Class A" [sic] while the other pair ran in Class AB. This was allegedly done for tonal reasons, to allow one pair to begin breaking up while the other pair was still clean, in order to give a fatter sound that was both distorted and clean/large at the same time.
During the duration of his patent he enjoyed exclusivity on this design. If people wanted to thicken up the sound by running two pair of tubes with different fixed-bias parameters, then they had to license his Simul-Class technology or develop a work around.
The Peavey design shows that there is more than one way to skin a cat. If you want two pair of triodes to distort at different levels, you can change where grid current limiting occurs and you can change where cut-off occurs. If you're working with a tetrode or a pentode then you also have the option to change where screen current limiting occurs. I'm thinking that PV did the screen resistor thing as a cheap way to circumvent one of Smith's patents by implementing differential clipping through differential screen-current limiting. You'd have to check the dates on the PV amp and the Smith patent to be sure.
Comment