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#1
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I am not sure what AA receivers means. Boy, it sure looks like series
type grid leak bias. That would be All American 5 tube line up. And not %. I do that my self some times. The hot chassis tube line up and circuitry patented by RCA. Did I get that right? Paul P. |
#2
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![]() "Paul P" REMOVE paul @ REMOVE ppinyot . REMOVEcom wrote in message ... I am not sure what AA receivers means. Boy, it sure looks like series type grid leak bias. That would be All American 5 tube line up. And not %. I do that my self some times. The hot chassis tube line up and circuitry patented by RCA. Did I get that right? Paul P. Thanks, All American is obvious once pointed out:-) I found the S-38B has the same arrangement. -- -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#3
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Paul P wrote:
I am not sure what AA receivers means. Boy, it sure looks like series type grid leak bias. That would be All American 5 tube line up. And not %. I do that my self some times. The hot chassis tube line up and circuitry patented by RCA. Did I get that right? Paul P. Thanks for the correction as I meant AA5 or All American 5 like the S38. Contact bias is the slight negative voltage developed on the control grid if the grid resistor is kept very high like in the range above 2.2 megohms. This voltage will be about -1 to -2 volts sufficient for low level audio signals. N9MHT-Bill |
#4
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![]() "Bill Cohn" wrote in message ... Paul P wrote: I am not sure what AA receivers means. Boy, it sure looks like series type grid leak bias. That would be All American 5 tube line up. And not %. I do that my self some times. The hot chassis tube line up and circuitry patented by RCA. Did I get that right? Paul P. Thanks for the correction as I meant AA5 or All American 5 like the S38. Contact bias is the slight negative voltage developed on the control grid if the grid resistor is kept very high like in the range above 2.2 megohms. This voltage will be about -1 to -2 volts sufficient for low level audio signals. N9MHT-Bill Thanks Bill, and to the others who responded. I've now discovered this is a pretty common arrangement. However, it doesn't seem to be mentioned in any of the older texts I looked at and neither is a gas gate tube, another feature of the S-20R and S-40 series. Later receivers don't seem to use them. I suspect they were necessary in receivers designed around the early metal type octal tubes, which, if I remember right, had a reputation for sometimes being a little gassy. Even though the S-20R did not originally use the contact bias arrangement I will try it and compare the results with the original circuit which is the conventional cathode bias sort. The values in the S-40A should do since otherwise the circuits are nearly identical other than the RF and mixer stages. As I mentioned, the circuit diagram for the very early S-40 shows the same cathode bias as in the earlier model but its revised in later production to the contact bias circuit. Since this would not have resulted in any cost saving it must have been done to improve performance. -- -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
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