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#1
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Many years ago when I was a teenager I remember a guy that was
building a push-pull grounded grid amplifier using 8 *811As. I never got to see if he finished it or not. The only info I have found so far is little more than an acknowledgment that such a circuit exist. Any further information would be appreciated. Jimmie |
#2
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On Sat, 29 May 2010 14:36:00 -0700, JIMMIE wrote:
Many years ago when I was a teenager I remember a guy that was building a push-pull grounded grid amplifier using 8 *811As. I never got to see if he finished it or not. The only info I have found so far is little more than an acknowledgment that such a circuit exist. Any further information would be appreciated. Jimmie Though I may be wrong (I often am) a Grounded grid push-pull is not possible. But I would suggest downloading the manual for the Ameritron AL-811H amp. It only uses 4 of the tubes but adding another 4 would be quite simple based on repetition. |
#3
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Pete wrote:
On Sat, 29 May 2010 14:36:00 -0700, JIMMIE wrote: Many years ago when I was a teenager I remember a guy that was building a push-pull grounded grid amplifier /snip/ Jimmie Though I may be wrong (I often am) a Grounded grid push-pull is not possible. /snip/ I know where you are coming from. If both tubes of a push pull long tail pair have grounded grids, it would be awkward to insert the signal. But if the push pull setup consists of cascode tubes each side, then a regular grid could inject the signal to modulate the grounded grid tube cathode current in cascode, to reflect on the other leg. Brian W |
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