Hi, dear fellow nfxp.
Part 1:
I won't question your motives for doing this project; to each his own
I understand that the "drool over/cool factor" is an important Human motivation, otherwise why should so many *monster* manufacturers be dropping "decorative" tubes into otherwise well made and good sounding products?
I must confess myself also guilty of doing it, at least a few times, to avoid losing sales to fanatic, absolutely unreasonable customers who loved my sound (otherwise I would not have even bothered) but wanted to see some glass and an orange glow somewhere in the chassis.
(by the way, the blue Led underneath usually means that the tube is *not* connected; I would use amber).
And what did I do?
You guessed right : a tube buffer !!!!! (between preamp and power amp)
Why?
Because it did *nothing* audible, I did not want to mess with the sound I already had.
What did I use?
Any tube I had left over .
"any" as in "ANY" , all work.
I wound an extra 6.3VAC filament winding.
The "high voltage" comes straight from the power amp rails; end to end I have either 84V (100/200W amps) or 140V (300/600W amps).
No, I didn't forget the cathode biasing resistor, it just isn't needed there.
Yes, the supply filtering is not perfect, there is a very slight hum present , it contributes to the "tube mojo". (no, I'm not kidding, there are respected "tube amp emulator" makers who inject a little 60/120Hz hum on purpose to the same end)
Which tube to use?:
any 12A*7, I used many 6AV6 or radio/TV tubes I got in lot buys, you name it.
Pentodes can be triode connected easily.
*Octal* tubes provide VERY POWERFUL Mojo.
Best part is that they all "work": they take 30 seconds to heat, sound fades in smoothly, if you pull them from the socket the amp becomes mute, etc.
**Some guys heard huge differences between different brands**
Oh Pavlov, you were a real genius !!!
Part 2:
a) Don't know how you reach "115V" there; quadrupled 12.6V (you said you fed your filaments with that) can at most provide around 64V, end to end.
b) I guess your filament winding is not center-tap grounded, that would explain a lot of "buzzing".
Part 3:
If all that matters is Mojo, do not even connect the tube (well, only the heaters) ; wire input jack straight to output jack or through a regular SS buffer.
After all, that's what many real famous makers do.
Good luck.
Part 1:
I won't question your motives for doing this project; to each his own
I understand that the "drool over/cool factor" is an important Human motivation, otherwise why should so many *monster* manufacturers be dropping "decorative" tubes into otherwise well made and good sounding products?
I must confess myself also guilty of doing it, at least a few times, to avoid losing sales to fanatic, absolutely unreasonable customers who loved my sound (otherwise I would not have even bothered) but wanted to see some glass and an orange glow somewhere in the chassis.
(by the way, the blue Led underneath usually means that the tube is *not* connected; I would use amber).
And what did I do?
You guessed right : a tube buffer !!!!! (between preamp and power amp)
Why?
Because it did *nothing* audible, I did not want to mess with the sound I already had.
What did I use?
Any tube I had left over .
"any" as in "ANY" , all work.
I wound an extra 6.3VAC filament winding.
The "high voltage" comes straight from the power amp rails; end to end I have either 84V (100/200W amps) or 140V (300/600W amps).
No, I didn't forget the cathode biasing resistor, it just isn't needed there.
Yes, the supply filtering is not perfect, there is a very slight hum present , it contributes to the "tube mojo". (no, I'm not kidding, there are respected "tube amp emulator" makers who inject a little 60/120Hz hum on purpose to the same end)
Which tube to use?:
any 12A*7, I used many 6AV6 or radio/TV tubes I got in lot buys, you name it.
Pentodes can be triode connected easily.
*Octal* tubes provide VERY POWERFUL Mojo.
Best part is that they all "work": they take 30 seconds to heat, sound fades in smoothly, if you pull them from the socket the amp becomes mute, etc.
**Some guys heard huge differences between different brands**
Oh Pavlov, you were a real genius !!!
Part 2:
a) Don't know how you reach "115V" there; quadrupled 12.6V (you said you fed your filaments with that) can at most provide around 64V, end to end.
b) I guess your filament winding is not center-tap grounded, that would explain a lot of "buzzing".
Part 3:
If all that matters is Mojo, do not even connect the tube (well, only the heaters) ; wire input jack straight to output jack or through a regular SS buffer.
After all, that's what many real famous makers do.
Good luck.
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