"Bill M" wrote in message
...
Joe McElvenney wrote:
Hi,
This Bill Orr article may be what you are looking for -
http://www.thecompendium.net/radio/SW-3/SW3maginfo.pdf
Incidently, the large choke in the audio coupling circuit is there to
obtain as high an AC gain as possible at the expense of a relatively low
DC voltage drop. The fact that the grid leak and coupling capacitor are
all part of the same assembly suggests that National used the same
arrangement is several designs.
Cheers - Joe
Great! Thank you very much.
-Bill
Could you use one winding of say an audio output transformer; the primary,
with nothing connected to the secondary?
The primary winding becoming a high inductance choke!
Found that out the hard way one time!
The speaker became disconnected; the primary was in the plate circuit of a
6V6, audio output pentode.
No sound, turned up volume, naturally, like you would!
Result sparks during peaks in the music from the plate pin of the tube
socket to a nearby ground/chassis wire or summat. Ah yes, high inductive
reactance, some audio power and induced voltage.
Lucky didn't burn out the insulated primary of the audio transformer!