Is it OK to have such hi values of negative screen grid current? My understanding is that near -0- negative screen grid current is OK. But at the lowest operative KT88 plate voltage -- 250V -- screen current is already -22mA and rising to -28mA at 400 plate volts.
This is an excellent question!
The screen is a wide open coil of wire, and when plate voltage is high cathode current largely gets sucked right past the screen and on to the plate. When you look at a
KT88 data sheet and see I
g2(o) = 1.7mA (as you do on Typical Operation on Page 2 of the linked sheet), you'e seeing that most of the cathode current is going to the plate (plate current is 64mA at idle for this condition). The "o" in the screen current symbol means "at idle" or "zero signal."
For the same condition, I
g2(max signal) = 9mA. But that's an average current.
When plate current swings from its idle value to its peak positive value, it creates a voltage drop across the plate load impedance which causes the plate voltage to swing low. We generally care about the point on the loadline when the control grid voltage is 0v, because that is also the point of peak plate current and low plate voltage.
Inside the tube, cathode current drawn has a weaker attraction to the plate, because it's now at 90v or 50v or 20v (whatever voltage corresponds to G
1 = 0v and peak plate current). If the screen is pegged to an unchanging voltage (maybe 300v or 400v), some additional portion of cathode current can get diverted to the screen by virtue of its high attraction as it makes its way towards the plate. So screen current rises. Still, the bulk of the current goes to the plate.
Now look at the lower graph on Page 7 of the linked data sheet. The graph indicates conditions for a screen voltage of 300v. See the dashed line? That indicates screen current when G
1 momentarily reaches 0v (or peak positive plate current). Where the loadline touches the 0v gridline, You would note the plate voltage. Then you would move straight down staying at the same plate voltage value, and read the indicated screen current.
You see that the curve of screen current only has a significant rise at very low plate voltage, which would only happen when the control grid is driven to 0v and you have a high load impedance (which generally cuts below the knee of the 0v gridline) which results in a low plate current
at that moment.The screen current indicated is only valid for the instant the plate voltage is at that value. So even the peaks at low plate voltage will only be brief blips of high current. The average current will not have risen so much.
It seems to me there should be a separate scale for the G2 current curve that is not shown on the KT88 data sheet. Such a separate scale is given on other tubes' data sheets.
Bottom line, screen current rise can and does happen in every amp you've ever played. That's why they have screen resistors (to limit screen dissipation). But the rise, if serious, only is significant when you're cranking maximum power output and hitting that 0v gridline. And depending on the choice of load impedance (and resulting plate voltage at G
1 = 0v), the screen current may not rise much.
The possibility of screen current rise is also why screen resistance is generally kept to a low value (so that screen voltage stays largely constant).