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On Jul 21, 11:48*am, "Bob Spooner" wrote:
"COLIN LAMB" wrote in message m... If the cathode resistor is the correct value, and the voltage across it is correct, then the power drawn by the tube is correct. *The tubes are running Class A and so over half of the power consumed is dissipated by the tubes (divide by 2 of course). *You can increase the cathode resistance or increase the screen resistor, to reduce power. *This could cause a mismatch in the output transformer ratio, but being Class A, it should still sound fine. Generally, what I would expect you would be seeing (actually, feeling) is a combination of small factors. *The filament voltage is probably above 6.5 and the plate and screen voltage may be a little above specified. This is because we have a higher line voltage. *Often, you have to think about incremental improvement, rather than night and day. *If you drop the filament voltage about .5 volts, you will decrease heat from the tubes by 1 watt. Also, adding a small muffin fan can do wonders to remove heat from those old metl boxes. 73, *Colin *K7FM Colin, Do they actually run class A even though the output stage is push-pull? 73, Bob AD3K- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Good question. Also if there is 18 volts across the cathode resistor and it measures within limits (immediately after switching off i.e. hot) that will allow calculation of the cathode current being drawn by the tube or tubes. |
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