Zippy wrote:
All I was doing was trying to keep it straight so someone doesn't come back later with citing YOUR posts and not knowing which is which.
Really? Ok, what about your comment regarding the Rocket and the 5F6A? God, I hope some poor soul doesn't cite YOUR post as evidence that the Rocket is actually a Bassman clone...
Sorry, but "two preamp gain stages plus a CF driven tonestack" is where the similarities between the Rocket and the Bassman end. The coupling caps are different, the loading for each gain stage is different, plate and cathode resistors are different, the tonestack is different, the PI is different, there is no GNFB, and the output section is COMPLETELY different! Now, look at an AC-30TB schematic and ignore everything besides the top boost channel. The Rocket is a STRAIGHT clone!!! If you're as concerned about accuracy as you claim to be, then drop the Rocket/Bassman crap and call it what it is.
Zippy wrote:
Cool. Regarding the tranny impedance selection, would you like to comment on the variation in effective output impedance as a function of operating voltage?
You can estimate the output impedance of the output tubes by squaring the plate voltage and dividing by the power output (which will be dependent on the bias current). So, for an express, 400^2 / 35 = 4571 ohms. However, this is just an estimate and as I'm sure you're aware, the output impedance changes drastically with frequency. Anything within the range of a 2:1 mismatch is usually safe.
I would be happy to make some more plots next weekend of an express running on the 5200 ohm tap versus the 6600 ohm tap if you're interested.
Structo, what you're looking at is the distortion spectrum of each of these amplifiers. I fed in a pure tone from a signal generator and used a spectrum analyzer to look at the output. Each peak that you see corresponds to a harmonic generated by clipping the input signal. By looking at the relative amplitudes of the harmonics, you can get a really good idea of the "character" of the distortion of each of the amplifiers. Of course, what you see isn't exactly what happens when you actually plug in a guitar because the signal from your pickups is the superposition of many frequencies to begin with, and linear circuit analysis fails when the amplifier is operating in a nonlinear region. That being said, in my experience I have found the results of this method of measurement to be positively correlated with what I actually hear.