I recently got an amp with two coin based G&E 6V6s and I love the sound of this amp. The amp with its stock 200 ohm cathode resistor (measured 219ohms) had a very high plate dissipation ( 15.5 watts on one tube, 13 watts on the other). Much to my amazement, there was no red plating at all, even after running it for close to two hours.
My Questions :
1.) I was following what I though was the correct method (Output Transformer Resistance Method) of measuring bias current through the output transformer, that is to measure the resistance of both sides to the center tap (~227 ohms in both), and then the voltage drop from both sides to CT, and divide the voltage by ohms to get the amps. Then measure the plate voltage and multiply by amps to get watts. I noticed the voltage measurement at the plate was roughly the same as at the OT lead. Is this a correct method, or am I doing something critically wrong ?
2.) I swapped tube sockets and the big 15.5 watts followed the tube. I also noticed that particular tube was slightly micro-phonic, but not red plating in any way, even when I stepped up the voltage a bit with my Variac.
3.) Other known good NOS tubes did red-plate a little when installed in this amp.
4.) I purchased another coin based G&E 6V6, and this one also draws big watts just like the other tube, but it is not micro-phonic in anyway, and again does not even have a hint of red-plating.
5.) I like the way this amp sounds with the high plate dissipations, but I did bump up the cathode bypass resistor to 250ohms, just to bring everything down a little bit ( so I can sleep ).
6.) It seems like these coin-based 6v6 tubes can take huge watts without red-plating, is this generally the case ? Are there other older style NOS tubes like this ? (I know about the JJs already).
I want to keep the amp exactly as it is, but instead of searching only for the somewhat rare and purportedly temperamental coin-based 6V6, I would like another vintage tube option if it's available.
Thank for your input and help !
My Questions :
1.) I was following what I though was the correct method (Output Transformer Resistance Method) of measuring bias current through the output transformer, that is to measure the resistance of both sides to the center tap (~227 ohms in both), and then the voltage drop from both sides to CT, and divide the voltage by ohms to get the amps. Then measure the plate voltage and multiply by amps to get watts. I noticed the voltage measurement at the plate was roughly the same as at the OT lead. Is this a correct method, or am I doing something critically wrong ?
2.) I swapped tube sockets and the big 15.5 watts followed the tube. I also noticed that particular tube was slightly micro-phonic, but not red plating in any way, even when I stepped up the voltage a bit with my Variac.
3.) Other known good NOS tubes did red-plate a little when installed in this amp.
4.) I purchased another coin based G&E 6V6, and this one also draws big watts just like the other tube, but it is not micro-phonic in anyway, and again does not even have a hint of red-plating.
5.) I like the way this amp sounds with the high plate dissipations, but I did bump up the cathode bypass resistor to 250ohms, just to bring everything down a little bit ( so I can sleep ).
6.) It seems like these coin-based 6v6 tubes can take huge watts without red-plating, is this generally the case ? Are there other older style NOS tubes like this ? (I know about the JJs already).
I want to keep the amp exactly as it is, but instead of searching only for the somewhat rare and purportedly temperamental coin-based 6V6, I would like another vintage tube option if it's available.
Thank for your input and help !
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