martin manning wrote: ↑Sun Dec 06, 2020 2:19 pm
For preamp tubes, I suppose one could measure frequency response and THD with the tube in some standard gain stage circuit, or maybe just measure Cg-a as an indicator.
I'd go for that. Measuring frequency response is a perfectly valid and repeatable test. But the tone folks are not going to be happy with the definition that tone equals frequency response. If it is, there's no particular reason to measure the tube's frequency response, as the outside circuit is a vastly bigger contributor to frequency response.
I have to disagree there. Power tubes can be matched for both current (at some particular Va, Vg2, and Vg1), and Gm at that operating point. Separate bias trimers can equalize the static current, but not the dynamic response.
Again, that's correct. Matching for grid voltage at a single DC point is what I'd call a one-point match. Matching for an average gm at some other point would be a two-point match. Really matching output tubes would probably need overlaying plate curves.
My suspicion is that there might, possibly be one supplier of matched tubes that match output tubes for anything other than DC bias. Maybe - and I'd be surprised - there could be two. The standard of the output tube matching industry has to be a one point DC match, on economics reasons if nothing else. That's because it's easy to just measure the grid bias for a given DC current in a box of 500 power tubes, record every one, then sort in a spreadsheet and find which ones make "good enough" matches. That's selecting from points on a line. Adding a matching for gm means measuring both bias voltage and gm for each tube, then looking for two-way matching on what amounts to a plane. Matching gm at more than one point, gets you to a three dimensional matching problem and tossing in frequency response, noise, hum feedthrough and so on, like the word "matched" implies to the uninformed consumer gets seriously out of hand. As a matter of practical economics, that's only feasible if the raw unsorted tube supply is very consistent indeed. And if it is that good, matching is far less necessary in the first place. Looked at another way, every additional parameter to be matched reduces the yield of matched sets, which is the same as increasing the fallout rate.
So yes, you -can- match for a much larger set of parameters. But you can also match the effective gm of one-point matched tubes with parts outside the tube. One simple, direct way to do this is to let vary the phase inverter's output slightly per tube. I've done this once, as a matter of fact. The Workhorse amps had switchiable bias targets for 6L6 and EL34, and normal and "hot" for each of those. I made the obvious mistake and got a mixed pair in one test, and tried trimming the plate resistors of the PI. Worked just fine. I awarded it my personal 9.75 for "tone".
Usually a dual triode tube is selected for matched sections, which might be desirable in a phase inverter.
True, you could. However, my experience with PI tubes is that the plate resistors have a very much larger effect than any differences from tube to tube. There is an application where matched halves of a duo-triode would be desirable, and was actually done. It was for the tubes in the Philbrick triode based opamps from the era of analog computation with these beasts. I got to work with one of the Philbrick setups back in college - the Navy had donated some old test setups from their work on onboard gun aiming computers. In that case you really, really want matched halves for the input characteristics, although gain matching wasn't particularly of interest.
I'd love to see some real (and verifiable) data about what actually gets matched in matched tube sets.
"It's not what we don't know that gets us in trouble. It's what we know for sure that just ain't so"
Mark Twain