Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
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- LeftyStrat
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Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
Could this be the inspiration for the later SSS amps with the cathode follower driver?
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- David Root
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Re: Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
It's possible. The SVT (same circuit) came out in '69, the first SSS about 10 years later, but could just as well have been this Heath W6-A or any of many such designs from the '50s. Notice it also uses 6550s, same as all SSS except the first four, not a coincidence I think.
Maybe Ampeg copied these older designs, very likely I think.
I haven't noticed it in Radiotron Designers Handbook, (4th Edition, 1953) but I haven't combed thru all several hundred pages of that tome, however I would bet it's in there somewhere.
The SSS used cathode follower drivers direct coupled to the power tube grids using negative bias probably of -150V or more. The W6-A is likely around minus 175-180V judging by the bias winding being 130-0.
Maybe Ampeg copied these older designs, very likely I think.
I haven't noticed it in Radiotron Designers Handbook, (4th Edition, 1953) but I haven't combed thru all several hundred pages of that tome, however I would bet it's in there somewhere.
The SSS used cathode follower drivers direct coupled to the power tube grids using negative bias probably of -150V or more. The W6-A is likely around minus 175-180V judging by the bias winding being 130-0.
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- LeftyStrat
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Re: Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
Thanks for that schematic. I hadn't seen that. Definitely looks like "lineage."
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
Re: Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
Guitar Player Magazine:LeftyStrat wrote:Could this be the inspiration for the later SSS amps with the cathode follower driver?
Were you making what was to become the overdrive before you made the Steel-String Singer?
Alexander Dumble:
"The Steel-String Singer came later, but I actually started making a series of amplifiers called the Dumbleland in about '66, and I still make them. That was the forerunner of the Steel-String Singer. I didn't change a whole lot about that; it was a design way ahead of its time. It was too much power and too silky clean for people. It's perfect for Stevie Ray, though. He has a hard time playing an Overdrive."
Guitar Player Magazine - September 1985
source: http://www.roblivesey.com/dumble/
Cheers,
Max
- LeftyStrat
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Re: Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
Yes, it seems the Heathkit W6 came out in 1958. That could have definitely served as inspiration, even down to the use of a 12BH7.
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
Re: Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
I've a a copy of an original data sheet of a Dumble SSS 150W. And in the "tube compliment" part of this original data sheet a 12BH7 isn't mentioned.LeftyStrat wrote:even down to the use of a 12BH7.
Cheers,
Max
- LeftyStrat
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- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 6:58 pm
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Re: Ampeg V9 Power Amp and the SSS.
I was speaking of inspiration for the V9.Max wrote:I've a a copy of an original data sheet of a Dumble SSS 150W. And in the "tube compliment" part of this original data sheet a 12BH7 isn't mentioned.LeftyStrat wrote:even down to the use of a 12BH7.
Cheers,
Max
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.