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1,25 2,5 5 7,5 10 14 18 30 75 100 125 300 350 400 450 500 ohmsIs it a real Boat Anchor? I wish I knew you 7 years back.
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How to bias the power tubes/valves to achieve Class A push-pull?
> How to estimate the needed input swing to drive the output stage?Seems like this has been answered before?
Seems like it would be a very popular question.
Seems like the guys who Invented the 6V6 probably had to post the answer, or lazy designers wouldn't even get started and 6V6 sales would be small.
Franks:
http://www.mif.pg.gda.pl/homepages/frank/vs.html Search for "6V6".
Frank has been adding lots of data-sheets and it has become a bit of an art to pick a good one first try. The top of the list is *usually* older, which may be more concise. The tube's original maker is authoritative; however he does not have the early Ken-Rad sheet. Tung-Sol is usually reliable if dry.
Tung-Sol 6V6 sheet 1965First page shows "Single Tube". This might guide your half-lame mode, or maybe not.
Second page says "Push Pull Class AB1". This IS class A for any practical purpose. Hair-splitters should stay off the stage.
All necessary data is there. The more-likely condition is 8K load and 285V B+ for 14W out.
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power transformer with ...230-0-230 VAC230V AC will peak-rectify out near 320V DC. Many people over-Volt their 6V6s this much. Conservatively you would plan a dropping resistor to get from ~~320V down to 285V with 74mA-105mA current. 35V/100mA is 330 Ohms 3.5 Watts (use 7W or higher). With practical losses you may not get 320V, or you may get more. Expect to change this to fit. (A handful of 100r 5W resistors is a good tool.)
The datasheet shows nominal fixed-bias. Lab Test conditions. In Real Life you should ALWAYS run resistor-bias Whenever Possible. We want 19V at 74mA-105mA. In fact we typically take the idle current, 75mA, and assume the amp will be OK at full roar. 19V/74mA is 250 Ohms on my abacus. (And I think I've seen it on some two-6V6 plans? Not joking... never trust a calculation that doesn't look right against known-good plans!) This resistor's power-rating should be based on the Full Roar current, at least 105mA. 250r*0.105A= 26.3V, 26.3V* 0.105A= 2.8 Watts, use at least 5W (and 10W is not wrong, or costly).
I've typed too much for this humidity. Surely you are not the first to build a two-6V6 amp? It is not a new past-time. So there must be driver plans somewhere. It is not clear if you want a guitar amp (this place's focus) or a hi-fi amp; the choice guides what plans you will seek-out and
plagiarize study.