Excuse me for buttin' in but need to ask a question regarding the 88's lower screen voltage as it's listed in the DS. ... G2 voltage and think he left it up near the plate voltage? ... Is the lower voltage listed in the DS because of a hi-fi thing(?) and it's perfectly fine to not worry or address it being lowered and/or regulated for a geetar amp?
PRR answered the question with all the relevant dots, so I'll just connect them for you.
Screen voltage is mainly about 2 issues: peak plate current and idle bias.
You see in the left two graphs on the Svetlana data sheet that plate current for all grid curves increases if the screen voltage is increased. For output stage design, you care first about power output, and are looking to select plate voltage (and implied plate voltage swing) along with peak plate current (and implied plate current swing) to get your target power output. The OT primary impedance is selected as the impedance which allows the right balance of plate current & plate voltage swings (and also by availability).
- Example: I'm looking for about 20w of output power, and my tube & supply voltage are such I can allow about 400v of peak plate voltage swing while leaving enough voltage across the tube to conduct. 400Vpeak = ~283Vrms -> 283Vrms
2/4kΩ = ~20Wrms, which might be an available OT impedance.
- 283Vrms/4kΩ = ~71mA of plate current -> 71mA * 1.414 = ~100mA peak plate current (above idle in a SE amp)
- If everything looks good up to this point, I'd be looking for what screen voltage supports my idle current plus another 100mA. I'd find this looking at the triode curves where the grid is at 0v; plate is tied to the screen in triode-mode, so the "plate voltage" where the 0v gridline touches my required plate current is equal to the screen voltage I need to allow that much peak plate voltage.
The other issue is idle bias. Assuming an otherwise-happy design, lower screen voltage in pentodes leads to "higher gain". Low screen voltage lets G1 bias be smaller for the same idle plate current, implying a smaller input signal slams the tube as far as it can go. In the Svetlana data sheet example, if the screen were 400v instead of 225, G1 bias would have to be more like -45v instead of -17v for the same idle current. That implies a peak input voltage of 45v rather than ~17v peak for the same plate voltage/current activity, and a lower gain.
The Svetlana does not give the load impedance, a critical detail. ...
I think they had ~1.7kΩ in mind.
Since Max Signal Plate Current is only ~21% over idle, I'm assuming that's an RMS plate current. 19w/(105mA
2) = 1723Ω
1.7kΩ would mean plate voltage swing is only 150mA * 1.7kΩ = 255v peak, so plate voltage could have been lower. Or maybe they were thinking a B+ of 450v (with the usual trick of bridge rectifier, CT to midpoint of stack filter caps, giving an easy 225v supply point), cathode bias, and B+ voltage which sags a bit under the full load. 87mA * 450v is only ~39w, and less once you subtract bias due to the cathode resistor.
The whole design could be different (plate voltage near screen) with a lower supply voltage and a little higher load impedance.