I know the "L" is the more powerful tube (about 20 watts)
The "L" also has stronger bass.
Can I put "L"s in an amp designed for "V"s without other changes ?
Will it stress the OT/PT ?
Thanks
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Thanks guy!Guy77 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 15, 2019 11:12 pm Hi, the 6v6 tube puts out about 12 watts while the 6L6GC puts out about 30 watts per tube and so yes the 6L6 can stress your transformers.
You would need to check the specs of your transformers before making the swap.
Also the Bias for your power tubes would have to be changed to accommodate the 6L6 tubes.
Your 6v6 tubes probably have a 6.6K primary OT while the 6L6 likes a 4K but you can also run your 6L6 with a 6.6K primary OT as long as its a hefty one and not a light 2 lb one.
My suggestions above are for a push pull style amp (2 x6L6 tubes)
I am sure many others with more insight than me while chime in.
Cheers
Guy
Was thinking of using that as a test platform, but I may build from the ground up.Tony Bones wrote: ↑Fri Feb 15, 2019 11:25 pm I wouldn't worry too much about the OT, but be aware that the 6L6 draws twice the heater current; 0.9A vs 0.45A per tube.It's not always a big deal, but if you're talking about a 64 Princeton Reverb then you might want to be cautious. The PT's on those are a little on the small side to start with.
Cathode Ray wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 12:05 amSonically, is there any difference between a 6V6 and a 6L6 ?
See tubeswell's answer, above. But note that he's talking about tubes IN-CIRCUIT, and not as standalone components. To rephrase, individual tubes have no particular "sound" until they're coupled with other components, and it's the complete circuit that defines the sound.Cathode Ray wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 12:05 amSonically, is there any difference between a 6V6 and a 6L6 ?
Great! Many thanks!tubeswell wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:11 amCathode Ray wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 12:05 amSonically, is there any difference between a 6V6 and a 6L6 ?
Quite a lot. 6L6s that are run at optimum operating voltages require more bias voltage, so they run cleaner/more headroom, all other things being equal. In a tweed bassman (with 2* pre-amp stages before a LTP inverter), they will run a lot cleaner than 6V6s.
* the direct-coupled pair driving the tone stack, only has the overall gain of a single stage. (The input stage is the other stage). A LTP inverter has about 1/2 the gain of a normal inverting gain stage. - so that's '2 &1/2' gain stages. This will easily overdrive a 6V6 grid, but a 6L6 grid will stay cleaner longer
Their higher heater current draw, means they run hotter cathodes, so they deliver more tube current = more power for given voltage. If you run them optimally, you need PT and OT to be adequately rated for the power they will see.
The higher current and bigger output transformer means more bandwidth is present.
More headroom and more bandwidth = sonic differences. If you want a great-performing loud bassman amp, then use 6L6s
If the 6L6GC has a 30 watt plate then under the same 'design max' rating system, the 6V6 has a 14 watt plate. The 12 watt rating is under the 'design center' system.