The 1953 Multivox Premier 120 guitar amp I worked on recently has a typical output stage with two push-pull 6V6s sharing a cathode resistor, but, unlike many similar output stages, it has no cathode bypass capacitor.
While I had it open, as an experiment, I alligator-clipped in a cathode bypass capacitor and found that it definitely increased the perceived power of the amp (via transient response), but it also worked the stock speaker, a 12" with a fairly small voice coil, fairly hard.
That made me consider why the amp designer left a cathode bypass out of the original design. Was it because they wanted to use smaller, less expensive speakers and, thus, limited the amp's output power on purpose?
Are there other amps from this era that appear to be intentionally limited in output power in some way?
I'm just thinking out loud here, and I could very well be completely off-target.
While I had it open, as an experiment, I alligator-clipped in a cathode bypass capacitor and found that it definitely increased the perceived power of the amp (via transient response), but it also worked the stock speaker, a 12" with a fairly small voice coil, fairly hard.
That made me consider why the amp designer left a cathode bypass out of the original design. Was it because they wanted to use smaller, less expensive speakers and, thus, limited the amp's output power on purpose?
Are there other amps from this era that appear to be intentionally limited in output power in some way?
I'm just thinking out loud here, and I could very well be completely off-target.
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