A quick look through my closest RCA copy shows all the power tubes as pentodes in the pinout drawings. 6L6, 6BQ5, 6V6, 6550, EL34, etc. I have seen data sheets with the little deflector symbols for beam elements, but I don;t see them in my RCA. And that leads me to conclude that I cannot rely upon the pinout diagram to tell me if a tube is a beam tube or a pentode. The text description does that.
My suspicion is that in terms of the schematics, it doesn;t matter what type tube it is, and perhaps they felt it less confusing - potentially - if the element after the screen was just always drawn as a grid. SOme other data sheet issuers may have felt differently.
And miltown, while current catalogs may offer a "6V6", unless it is a NOS offering, it won;t be a true 6V6. The metal tubes are pretty rare. I have seen darn few of those in my career. A lot fewer than I have metal 6L6s. SO if you are selecting from currently produced tubes, like EH, and JJ, and SOvtek, etc, then making a distinction between 6V6 and 6V6GT is pointless. Let's just say that current use of 6V6 is an informal use of the type name.
My suspicion is that in terms of the schematics, it doesn;t matter what type tube it is, and perhaps they felt it less confusing - potentially - if the element after the screen was just always drawn as a grid. SOme other data sheet issuers may have felt differently.
And miltown, while current catalogs may offer a "6V6", unless it is a NOS offering, it won;t be a true 6V6. The metal tubes are pretty rare. I have seen darn few of those in my career. A lot fewer than I have metal 6L6s. SO if you are selecting from currently produced tubes, like EH, and JJ, and SOvtek, etc, then making a distinction between 6V6 and 6V6GT is pointless. Let's just say that current use of 6V6 is an informal use of the type name.
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