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On Apr 2, 12:14 pm, "tubegarden" wrote:
On Apr 2, 6:53?am, "Ed Engelken" wrote: Googling the term, I see that the 52 tube seems to be an example where both grids are brought out to individual terminals. ======================================= The #46 is another. The 46 was popular in a number of A****er Kent radios circa 1932-33. ?Class B Push-Pull output stages in high-end radios had a brief run in the early 1930s, then faded into history. ?-- Ed Hi RATs! I have a huge P-P 46 vintage amp. It is not yet functioning. It is clearly very well built ![]() Grow up, Class "A" does not mean good, it means simple ... which, despite some journalists' daydreams, is not exactly the same thing ... A push-pull pair of zero-bias class B triodes is even more remarkably simple. When I first saw the schematic of a 811A P-P audio amp, I was astonished to find not a single resistor or capacitor in the circuit. Two tubes, input and output transformers, and connections to a filament supply and a plate supply. That's all there is, folks! Tim. |
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