1- Channels
a- One channel alone will do the total output of the amp?
Yes. The preamp channels are simply boosting the guitar's output voltage up to ~1vRMS which is usually enough to enable the phase inverter to drive the output tubes to maximum power.
1- Channels
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b -Linking channels. In Fender amps with 2 channels like the Twins, when linked, do they add up to the signal before getting to the power tubes, by linking the channels does it produce more gain?
Yes, but...
When 2 tube stages are in parallel (like linked channels), the total gain is the sum of the individual stage gains (A1 + A2).
When 2 tube stages are in cascade (one after the other), the total gain is the product of the individual stage gains (A1 * A2).
So having a preamp with 3 cascaded gain stages is potentially a lot more gain than linking 2 channels of 2 gain stages each. (60*60*60 = 216,000 vs (60*60)+(60*60) = 7,200)
2- In the amp when there are speaker socket and external speaker socket, lets use as example the 6G8 something I'm familiar with, as far as I understand thethe speaker sockets are in parallel yes? So it is for 4 Ohms load, and there is a 4 Omhs 2x12 cab connected to the speaker socket, what can be connected to the external speaker socket, another 4 ohms cab? But if the sockets are in parallel wouldn't it make those two cabs a 2 Ohms load total?
Yes.
If you want to reflect the same primary impedance as the stock speaker load, then you should have 2x 8Ω cabs connected to the jacks. But the amp will handle a 2Ω load from 2x 4Ω cabs, reflecting a different (lower) primary impedance and probably producing less clean power. However, the extra speakers will probably sound like more acoustic volume in the room, so it's kind of a wash...
3- Rectifier and diodes, In my building of a 6G8 the rectifier I build there are 7 diodes, in the schematic there is no mention about what value they are, so I followed my instincts and what did make sense, and build it with the 1N4007/1000V, 1 amp rating but then reading this topic: http://el34world.com/Forum/index.php?topic=19174.0
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So it leaves me with the impression that something maybe incorrect in my rectifier. Do i have too much diode value there? How many amps and volts the diode(s) should have? Does it need all those 6 diodes 1N4007?
Yes, you could get away with a single 1N4007 per side (2x instead of 6x), but people generally copy layouts and you're not hurting anything with the extra diodes.
How to determine the diode rating you need? For voltage, take the PT RMS winding voltage and multiply by 2.828. When the PT winding attached to a rectifier is swinging negative, the diode is shut off. The diode will feel the peak of that negative swing (winding RMS volts * 1.414) plus the voltage on the filter cap (which could be as much as winding RMS volts * 1.414). So a 1N4007 with a 1kV PIV rating shouldn't be hooked up singly to a PT winding with more than 1kV/2.828 = ~353v RMS. That implies a peak voltage of 353v RMS * 1.414 = ~500v peak into the 1st filter cap.
The current rating is harder to figure, and is governed by the peak charging current for the filter caps. Rather than guess, most smaller circuit are okay with a 1N4007, while bigger amps might be safer with a 1N5408 (with a 3A rating). You can stack 1N4007's in series to raise the composite voltage rating, but the current rating stays the same. You could add extra diodes in parallel to raise the current rating, but soon you'll spend more than simply buying the diode with a higher current rating.
And what the 7th diode does?
6 of the diodes are for the high-voltage B+ supply. The 7th diode is for the bias supply.