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John Popelish wrote:
The grid acts as a rectifier that builds a DC grid bias voltage from the rectified AC signal, biasing the tube off. Then the tank dies a natural death. But in a "normal-functioning" oscillator, the DC grid bias doesn't cut things off for so long, right? The P-P amplitude at the grid (as seen by my 10x scope probe) when the circuit is not squegging is in fact larger than when it is squegging. I suppose it is possible there's some weird kink in tube characteristics for all the pentodes I tried. Adding the series resistor reduced the efficiency of the rectification. Sounds like you have too much positive feedback, to begin with. Probably, but moving the tap on the tank coil had little effect. The handbook says about a third of the way up from the ground end, but I tried it at a half, two-thirds, one-tenth, etc. It did alter the shape and timing of the squegging a little bit but it was still squegging. If I moved it too far the circuit didn't oscillate at all (too little feedback). Also, changing the biasing (trying to move it further into class A) by putting a cathode resistor in didn't help much either. Tim. |
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