If so, in what way does the B+ relate to the impedance of an output circuit? Does impedance change with voltage in an output circuit?roberto wrote:A pair of 6L6 running around 500V B+ are almost perfect.
Silverfox.
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
If so, in what way does the B+ relate to the impedance of an output circuit? Does impedance change with voltage in an output circuit?roberto wrote:A pair of 6L6 running around 500V B+ are almost perfect.
1) to begin with, limiting values are exactly that, what will destroy the tube.
Which means reaching one is just bad enough, don't even dream to combine 2 or 3
Or "don't even dream of applying 800V, passing 150mA and surpassing 25W dissipation, all at once"
So:
* above 800V it will probably arc or short inside
* above 25W it will redplate
* above 150mA (continuous) it won't last much.
there's some extra values, characterized by a "sub 0" sign, which they don't explain in that datasheet, such as Ua0 (plate)=2000V and Ug20 (screen) = 800v.
It might mean maximum voltage with absolute zero current passing or internal arcing voltage, between that element and others nearby, even with tube off/cold (filaments off) .
Not sure about which of these but anyway those are not "working" conditions by any means so we won't even approach them.
2) Back to the design.
They publish a graph showing the relationship between 4 parameters:
* Plate current Ia
* Control grid voltage Ug1
* Plate voltage Ua
* Dissipation. Wa
[img:597:562]http://i57.tinypic.com/v40w76.gif[/img]
Read it knowing what each curve means, now things to make sense and fit together.
What can I "read" here?
One example, suppose I have an EL34 plugged in a socket on my workbench, apply, say, 120V to its plate, and -15V to its grid ... how much current will pass through its plate?
Example in violet:
First start from 0 V 0mA end of graph, then go to 120V on the horizontal line (voltage steps shown are 20V each, so we have 0 .. 20 ..40 .. ........ 120V which is the 6th vertical line) , the rise it until we meet the line labelled -15V, then turn left to reach the plate current, the mA scale and read it.
Current steps are 20mA each so since it's the 4th horizontal line it means 80mA .
Same for any plate votage/current/grid voltage combination.
Why a graph and not a formula?
For once, the formula, which exists, is very complex and confusing for most readers, although perfectly fine for circuit simulators .
And the beauty of the graph is that it's "a map" which shows "all at once".
FWIW I'm an old style Engineer which started University in 1969 and way back then, using graphs was the only Poker game in town.
Yes, but matched is a funny word, which may be taken as 'the load impedance matching the tube's impedance'.Rather, if you change the B+ by too much, change the impedance to keep the plate load matched