My understading is pin 1 is internally connected on an EL34.
Pin 1 on the EL34 is the suppressor, and is not internally connected, according to
Mullard and
Svetlana.
You're thinking of the
6L6 and
6V6. These tubes don't have "suppressors" and the data sheets call them "beam pentodes". They have beam-forming plates which perform the function of the suppressor and side-step European pentode patents. As you see from the data sheets, the "third grid" (which is the beam plates in these tubes, but would be the suppressor grid in a pentode) is internally connected to the cathode.
It is working. With pin #1 unconnected on the EL34-L output tubes.
It doesn't need to be fixed. I just find it odd that pin 1 is unconnected and it sounds fine.
You can drive a Ferrari with 4 flat tires, press the gas and it will go. But if you want to run laps at the track, you'd better get good tires on it.
Connecting the EL34's pin 1 (supressor) to pin 8 is simply a handy way to get it either at cathode voltage or ground (if the cathode is grounded for fixed bias). You
could just run a wire from pin 1 to ground.
What happens if you
don't? Well, now you have a tetrode instead of a pentode. The tube will still work, but you're guaranteed to have less output power. You won't notice the difference until you try to crank the amp all the way up (a full explanation is fodder for a different thread; suffice to say that tetrodes haven't been common audio output stages since maybe the 30's).
An EL34 must have the suppressor grid (pin 1) connected to something.
Before you think my statements contradict Sluckey's, the problem with tetrodes is when you
do crank that amp up, the screen grids are gonna draw a lot of current that should have gone to the plate, and the screens may exceed dissipation and melt. Maybe you'll avoid catastrophic failure, but either way, you won't get full performance at high output from your EL34's.
... I followed the schematic and as you can see, no pin 1 is shown. This is a schematic that Tubenit drew for me ...
It's a drawing, not the Bible.
Tubenit had to make his own tube symbols for the program used to draw that schematic, and his amps often use 6L6's or 6V6's. He doesn't have to worry about externally wiring pin 1, or even depicting a suppressor grid or beam plates in his schematics.
I know he didn't intentionally lead you astray. I'm sure he simply used the schematic symbols he had available and assumed if you use EL34's you'll know what to do. Pins 2 and 7 aren't on the schematic, yet you connected those to the filament winding.
For what it's worth, pin 1 is a recurring source of confusion. Pin 1 on the old metal-encased tubes often connected to the metal shell (see the RCA
6V6), which was almost universally grounded. Glass-encased versions came out, and there was no longer a need for pin 1 to be connected to the metal shell for grounding. Maybe the pin would be there, connected to nothing. Maybe the pin would be connected to the metal base of the tube (like some 6550's and others). Maybe the pin wouldn't even be installed.
The safe bet is to connect pin 1 either to ground or to the tube's cathode. If you plug in EL34's, you make the proper connection for the suppressor. If you plug in 6550's with a metal base, the base either gets grounded or is at a reasonably low voltage. If you plug in modern 6L6's, it doesn't do anything but also does no harm. If you plug in a metal 6V6 or 6L6, the grounded metal shell offers some shielding.
... I grounded the center tap of my bias circuit and connected the other two leads to a full wave bridge circuit. ... this caused the circuit to malfunction- overload due to a ground loop somewhere; don't know where.
A bridge rectifier
can never have a grounded center-tap. The center-tap is what caused the short, and in a high voltage supply will usually destroy the bridge and/or transformer winding.
Grounded center-taps are for regular full-wave, non-bridge, rectifiers.