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What characteristics do you get from parallel tridoes?

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  • What characteristics do you get from parallel tridoes?

    What are the typical attributes that paralleling triodes in a tube give you? Is it quieter, more powerful, ???

    Just trying to increase the wrinkles in the gray matter

  • #2
    I asked this question two days ago and received the following from kg :

    Originally posted by kg View Post
    well the theory behind it is that paralleled sections give you twice the gm, half the rp, and the same mu.

    that is good from a noise standpoint, both "internal" to the tube, and external/induced due to the lower plate node impedance.

    however if the lowest input stage noise were really your goal you wouldn't be using a 12ax7.
    Paul P

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    • #3
      So the main benefit is noise reduction? Maybe a lower output impedance...for driving a tone stack, too? Forthat you'd probably be better off with a single gain stage and a cathode follower though I bet.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by CitizenCain View Post
        So the main benefit is noise reduction? Maybe a lower output impedance...for driving a tone stack, too? Forthat you'd probably be better off with a single gain stage and a cathode follower though I bet.

        I would agree, a better solution to drive a tone stack would be a single gain stage boot-strapped to a cathode follower. I believe the main benefit of running parallel triodes is to fatten up the tone. I did this on my first 5 watt prototype amp. However, on my next 18 watt prototype, I'll run a triode in parallel with a pentode front-end. Maybe I'm giving away too much on how I am intending how to bring back the pentode front-end on a guitar amp.

        -g
        ______________________________________
        Gary Moore
        Moore Amplifiication
        mooreamps@hotmail.com

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by mooreamps View Post
          I Maybe I'm giving away too much on how I am intending how to bring back the pentode front-end on a guitar amp.

          -g
          Trade secrets revealed!

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          • #6
            Yeap I thought parallel triodes fattened up the tone too. In fact I heard this for myself for the first time the year before last when I observed a local musician plug a short lead from the lo gain input of one channel to the hi gain input of the other channel of his 5E3 - which is one of the things that inspired me to build a 5G9. I can't wait to finish it and take it for a test drive. :-)
            Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)

            "I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo

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            • #7
              Hmmm, a fatter tone is something that sounds interesting to me.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by CitizenCain View Post
                Hmmm, a fatter tone is something that sounds interesting to me.
                Being the tone grasshopper around here, could someone explain to me what is
                meant by "fatter tone". It sounds appealing. More <width, depth, crunch,?>
                Actually, crunch could use a definition as well.

                Technically, does it mean that a sine wave would be squared up a little bit,
                like in fattening up the sine wave ? Seeing as this is only one stage, does
                this fattening apply only to half of the wave ?

                Paul P

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by mooreamps View Post
                  I would agree, a better solution to drive a tone stack would be a single gain stage boot-strapped to a cathode follower. I believe the main benefit of running parallel triodes is to fatten up the tone. I did this on my first 5 watt prototype amp. However, on my next 18 watt prototype, I'll run a triode in parallel with a pentode front-end. Maybe I'm giving away too much on how I am intending how to bring back the pentode front-end on a guitar amp.

                  -g
                  You're late, some of us are already building pentode preamps.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by hasserl View Post
                    You're late, some of us are already building pentode preamps.
                    I've disected a couple of old burned out pre-amp pentode tubes, put them under a microscope, and I believe I have determined the failure mechanism. I'll find out later on if my fix abates this problem.

                    -g
                    ______________________________________
                    Gary Moore
                    Moore Amplifiication
                    mooreamps@hotmail.com

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Paul P View Post
                      Being the tone grasshopper around here, could someone explain to me what is
                      meant by "fatter tone". It sounds appealing. More <width, depth, crunch,?>

                      Paul P
                      'Thicker' and fuller with more stuffing, I would say
                      Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)

                      "I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        So, to actually wire up parallel triodes, is it simply jumpering 1-6, 2-7, and 3-8? Do you treat is as one triode when figuring the plate and cathode resistors? I suppose it doesn't make any difference which pin of each pair you use to make connetions to?

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Paul P View Post
                          Being the tone grasshopper around here, could someone explain to me what is
                          meant by "fatter tone". It sounds appealing. More <width, depth, crunch,?>
                          Actually, crunch could use a definition as well.

                          Paul P
                          I'd define it as more lower midrange. A scooped tone isn't fat. A tweedy tone (defined as sounding like a Tweed Fender) is fat. Lots of that nice lower midrange. But that's just me.
                          In the future I invented time travel.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by cminor9 View Post
                            I'd define it as more lower midrange. A scooped tone isn't fat. A tweedy tone (defined as sounding like a Tweed Fender) is fat. Lots of that nice lower midrange. But that's just me.
                            Thanks. This makes sense, and something I can sort of imagine. I searched
                            for a tone glossary on the net but found nothing, surprisingly. There are a
                            lot of terms floating around like grind, grit, punch, crunch, squish, sponge,
                            dynamic, dirt, bees in a can, icepick in the head, etc, etc...

                            A glossary with sound clips would be really nice.

                            Paul P

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by CitizenCain View Post
                              So, to actually wire up parallel triodes, is it simply jumpering 1-6, 2-7, and 3-8? Do you treat is as one triode when figuring the plate and cathode resistors? I suppose it doesn't make any difference which pin of each pair you use to make connetions to?

                              That would be one way to do it. My circuits are little more complex.

                              -g
                              ______________________________________
                              Gary Moore
                              Moore Amplifiication
                              mooreamps@hotmail.com

                              Comment

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