Hi all, I found this pdf about the Phase Inverter on the net and thought someone might find it helpful ...
Thanks for posting this.
There are some half-truths or incomplete information though in it. I agree with some of his big-picture end results, but not the how/why of it occurring.
Like what?
1. "V1 ... has the largest impact on your tone and gain but has less impact on your
output distortion touch dynamics and output stage distortion than the phase inverter."
- Okay, I can buy that. An amp's tone has the biggest change when you try various tube in V1, but those expensive NOS tubes seem to have less impact on the amp's tone when you plug them in the phase inverter or output tube sockets.
2. "Some basic tube facts
• 12AX7
o Has a published spec gain of 100
o Has a publishes spec current output of 1.2 milliamps
• 12AT7
o Has a published spec gain of 60-70
o Has a published spec current output of 10.0 milliamps (ten times that of the 12AX7 as a side note)"
- Sorta. They have a published spec
Mu of 100 and 60, respectively. Actual gain in the circuit is often a bit above half of these numbers, and depends on use in the circuit.
The phase inverter can use various circuits, and the gain of this position in the circuit can vary from less than 1 (split-load/cathodyne inverter by itself) to ~1/4 of Mu (long-tail pair, as used in most amps) to ~1/2 Mu (paraphase inverter, but just the first triode; second should have "no gain" or roughly the same result as the long-tail when considering the effect of both triodes).
"Has a published spec current output of ..." is either wrong or a bad way to think of the situation, because:
a. There's no spec for output current on the data sheet (plate current does not equal "output current")
b. Tube plate current depends on how you use the tube in your particular circuit, and
c. Most data sheets have show-off conditions which are far removed from the reality of how we use the tube in a guitar amp
What I mean is there are few times a guitar preamp tube is idling above a milliamp or so because we also use large plate or cathode resistors, and to have high tube current implies higher supply voltages than are common. It would have been
much more accurate for him to say the 12AT7 has lower internal resistance and therefore lower output impedance.
3. "When you push your amp hard it is not as much the output tubes distorting as it is the phase inverter breaking down and distorting. ... The phase inverter may be the hardest worked tube in most amps."
- The second sentence looks like repeating Aspen Pittman's claim that you should replace the phase inverter along with the output tubes. It simply isn't true, and I believe was really about selling more 12AT7's when it was first said.
- The first sentence makes me think, "Are you kidding me?" Output stage distortion is mostly about output tubes distorting.
The saving grace for him is that it isn't
only about output stage distortion. We'll revisit in a moment.
4. "The output tubes are less important than many folks may think. ... In the Hi-Fi world ... The output tube type had very little to do with anything. In guitar amps we purposely push the output tube beyond their design limits to make them distort."
- So this is one of those key places where I agree with real-world results that he heard, but disagree with why the results happened. Read on.
If you swap Svetlana 6L6GC's for RCA blackplate 6L6GC's, you might be disappointed by the lack of audible change in a given amp. I agree that the cost/benefit isn't as good as for preamp tube changes. The reference to hi-fi seems to have little relevance, given he then states that guitar amps don't operate tubes the way hi-fi operates them.