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Tim Wescott wrote:
Bill M wrote: I'm a little confused again. Setting up a 1624 tube for cathode biasing and also need to create a center tap for keying to ground. The book says 610 ohms at my voltage. So would I use a pair of 1200 ohm resistors in this case? My logic is since there is not a separate cathode then the two R in parallel would raise the filament 'cathode' 600 ohms above B-minus. TIA and Merry Christmas, Bill (Disclaimer -- I haven't done this. It's just knowledge gotten from lots of books, and lots of solid-state circuit design experience). No, because all the filament voltage will go to mildly heating up the resistors, and none will go to wildly heating up the filament. Use a center-tapped filament transformer, and put the 600 ohm resistor between its center tap and ground. If necessary, use a separate transformer just for the 1624s. If his un-centertapped filament winding is ONLY supplying that one tube and he has each leg going to ground through a 1200 ohm resistor that would result in a 600 ohm connection to ground. So it should work. Remember that's 2400 ohms across the filament, it won't suck up much heater current at all. |
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