Bassman 5B6 ... Which should I use for a cathode biased Bassman.
... The Hammond Bassman power transformer is well over 200ma. Just wanted to check.
Except which "Hammond Bassman power transformer" are we talking, because Hammond has 7 different ones for domestic 60Hz use.
The lowest-wattage one is likely the tweed 5F6-A Bassman PT, which Hammond marks
290DX. But that amp is fixed bias and 45+ watts, while you said, "Bassman 5B6" and "cathode bias."
A cathode-biased pair of 6L6s won't make much more than 30w (and often quite a bit less) so less-voltage & less-current are acceptable.
I looked at the
272FX and saw it was 600v CT at 173mA.
300v x 1.414 = 424v minus rectifier-drop ---> about 390-400v.
I looked at a
6L6GC data sheet (top graph of page 6) and saw that with 350-400v on the screen, the 6L6 can pull its plate down to 75-100v and pass over 200mA peak.
A typical 50w output transformer, like
Hammond's 1650N has a 4.3kΩ primary impedance.
The 6L6 plate might swing a maximum voltage of 400v idle - 100v peak = 300v peak across the primary.
We can start by assuming the power section stays Class A: 4.3kΩ / 2 = 2150Ω to one side.
300v peak / 2150Ω = 140mA peak ---> we don't need all the current the PT can deliver
300v peak x 140mA peak = 42w peak ---> 21 watts RMS ---> about right for the
5B6's 5881 output tubesYou can have slop in any direction, and you won't really notice a difference in power/loudness or sound. Your biggest defining feature is "cathode bias" and for that we don't really want high voltage (and shouldn't expect "high power output")