Hi guys,
I was looking at some 6g15(standalone outboard reverb)-ish schematics and came across the fender dual professional Zinky designed (see attached schematic). At the input stage it uses a tail beneath the cathode resistor (like a sort of asymmetric cathodyne/concertina PI), serving double duty as both (modest) gain stage and cathode follower for mixing buffered dry with recovered wet. As the signal is miniscule i dont see any risk of the next stage clamping its grid (thus have the follower make its anode go full shitshow), plus the tiny signal in means the tail dont steal too much swing headroom from the anode. I think the solution is quite genius in its simplicity, effectively saving a triode.
This got me thinking: in my estimation the "achilles" of the 6g15-design is that a single triode give not enough gain(50), but two cascaded provide too much gain(2500), forcing us to dump a lot of it before the tank driver (without utilizing it for EQ-purposes). Did someone say pentode?? :)
My question: Would this magic Zinkytina-Zinkytail setup of an asymmetric split load be feasible with a pentode?
Say EF86 datasheet standard: 100n input, 1m grid leak to 1k cathode(full bypass), 100k anode, 390k screen+100n cap, but now tied to a 10k tail, serving as follower for dry mixing. What are the implications? I dont see us loosing too much swingroom, but do we loose substantial gain?
And how does the constant cathode current of a pentode come into play? I do remember having read in Merlins book that given the screen cap be tied to the top of the followers tail (i.e not to ground), a pentode could be used for follower duty. But i cant see in my head HOW, given that pentodes running class A should be (near) constant current (thus no tail wiggle?).
Ive been trying to get this straight in my head for days (to no avail). The combination of follower feedback, asymmetric anode, screen current and the constant cath-current nature of pentodes turn any cerebral simulation into proper mush. If you can, please help!
Many many thanks! /kw