Thanks -- glad I wasn't a
complete idiot .... ;^)
Sometimes I tend to go off in a direction, and completely forget why I started down that path ...
My
original idea was to build a tweed Deluxe, but single-ended -- like a Deluxe/Champ hybrid, with the tone/feel of the champ, but the power of the Deluxe. I had in my mind the 22-Watt figure (which, if memory serves, corresponds to the output of a blackface Deluxe, not a tweed, but not certain). I initially started out planning to use a KT88, and as I was trying to learn the ins and outs as I was spending money, grossly mis-specified my PT and OT, so I had way too much plate voltage, and the screen voltage was going to be an issue.
Then, I obtained the KT12o (which I'm coming to like very much in its own right), and since the datasheet had specs for 'typical application' that included 400V plate, 225V grid, and 20W output, I just shot for that.
As you can see from my schematic, I'm using the OT I originally figured as 5k into 8-ohm as 2.5k into 4-ohm, and that's the reason for
that particular 'design decision'.
Once again, I do like the tone, but I might like it to be a bit tighter, and am thinking that fixed bias may be a benefit. The Princeton chassis is already a bit tight, so eliminating the regulation circuit, perhaps by using the U/L tap, will free up enough room for the bias circuitry.
btw ... this is the PT I'm using ... is attached, so if anyone has any suggestions, cautions, warnings about using more than one of those taps simultaneously,
THAT would be most helpful! I
hate that aroma of frying transformer ....
I saw your amp's schematic in another thread. Now it completely makes sense why you'd use a regulator to derive your screen voltage (because it's much lower than your B+/plate voltage).
I'll say this: if you're happy with how the amp is performing, you're done! Enjoy!
If you are fighting for every last milli-Watt from the amp, then you can lurch down the road of worrying about the impact of changing screen-to-cathode voltage. A cathode bypass cap will take care of some of it, but it is normal for the cathode voltage to shift in a cathode biased amp due to the effect of distortion. Under distortion, the top half of the wave is not exactly the same size/shape as the bottom half, and this creates a net offset to the voltage across the cathode resistor, and the bypass cap charges to this bias offset.
Outside of gross distortion, this is probably not a big bias-shift and certainly not a big change of screen-to-cathode voltage ("big" meaning enough to constrain plate current significantly). So know it's there, but maybe not worry too much.