Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roger Leone wrote:
"Ken Scharf" wrote One advantage of "cathode driven tetrode" (where normal grid bias and screen voltage are applied) is that you get higher power gain and usually don't need to neutralize the amplifier (technically it is IMPOSSIBLE to neutralize a ground grid amplifier anyway). Ken: I think you meant to say that cathode driven tubes have LOWER power gain. Grid driven amps can have as much as 10 dB or more gain than cathode driven (GG) amps, all other factors being equal. My Johnson Thunderbolt running a pair of grid driven 4-400's can be driven to full output with about 20 watts of RF drive (representating close to 20 dB of power gain). The same tubes in GG configuration would need close to 80 watts to drive them to full output. Actually I meant to say that the "cathode drive tetrode" has HIGHER gain than a TRUE grounded grid amp. The only difference in gain between a grid driven amp and a cathode driven tetrode amp would be due to the driving power lost in the input circuit. But don't forget that in a cathode driven circuit, some of the input power actually feeds through and appears as part of the output, so it really isn't 'lost'. Your statement about needing 80 watts to get full output in gg would NOT be true if you ran the 4-400's in "cathode driven tetrode" service. The BIG difference is applying normal bias and screen voltage rather than grounding both grids and running in zero bias class B. I suspect you'd need less than 25-30 watts for full output in "cathode driven tetrode". BTW you'd need quite a bit LESS than 20 watts drive in grid driven service, if you ran the tubes in class AB1 where only voltage (no grid current) is required. (But it might take THREE tubes to get the same output as TWO in class B or AB2). A grid driven 4CX250 can produce over 200 watts of output with 2 watts of drive (per the RCA manual). Because the tube isn't commonly used in GG configuration, that manual doesn't provide power gain figures for cathode driven service. My guess is you would need more like 8 to 10 watts of cathode drive to get the same 200+ watts out. Sounds about right. Depends on how good your input matching network is. Those figures must be for class AB2 though. In class AB1 your IMD goes way down and the driving power might be only 1-2 watts in cathode drive. The widespread use of transceivers in the 100 watt class has made GG amps popular since there is no need to attenuate the transceiver's output. With my grid driven Thunderbolt, I use a 6 dB attenuator at the amp's input to keep from overdriving it. With the right choice of tube, a GG amp can have a much simpler power supply. And since there is no need for neutralization, homebrewing a GG amp is quite appealing. A newer way is to run tetrodes in grid driven service with a 50 to 200 ohm high power non inductive swamping resistor from grid to ground. NO matching network needed, same drive requirement as grounded grid, no neutralization. Waste of power though. Many commerical amps using Sevtlana tetrodes using this circuit. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FA:$10>TWO(2) USA 6146B RF OUTPUT TUBES Tested-Handy to have! | Equipment | |||
FA: $9.99 TWO(2) BRAND-NEW 6146B RF OUTPUT TUBES | Swap | |||
FA: $9.99 TWO(2) BRAND-NEW 6146B RF OUTPUT TUBES | Equipment | |||
FA: $9.99 TWO(2) BRAND-NEW 6146B RF OUTPUT TUBES | Equipment | |||
fa= TWO(2) CHINESE 6146B RF OUTPUT TUBES, NOS-NR @$10 | Equipment |