To my mind, #1 & #4 are two ways of looking at the same effect.
Yes, I see that. Good point. They both are addressed by altering the Q.
I was trying to differentiate between RF that gets into the system from outside and oscillation that is generated by the tube itself. They both get damped, but they arise in different ways. Maybe I should consider that as an (a) and (b) as part of the same thing, since the mechanism of damping (lowered Q) is identical.
I've added strikethroughs & italics to edit the statement (C is internal to the tube, plus stray capacitance due to wiring, L is stray inductance mostly due to wiring).
Ah, yes, I see. Thanks for clarifying that.
The SSR:
4) Prevents cathode-to-screen arcing, as the amount of current that can pass through the SSR is limited, so the arc can never get started.
I'll take your word these resistor help in this regard; I've never found this to be a problem to solve in audio amps I've owned.
It's interesting you picked up on that.
I know that the EICO and Dynaco amplifiers did not include SSRs and were not reported to suffer from screen arcing. So there's that data point.
Reading tube papers from the 1950s and 1960s turned up a lot of work was done on reducing cathode-to-plate arcing because of reduced inter-electrode distances. Sylvania touted its new sarong cathode design as lowering that risk. (I can't find much about it in practice, only some ads and a few patents.)
But other reports of damage listed screen arcs as a problem, and it was a casual toss off of something like, and oh, with these higher plate voltages screen arcs are showing up as well as cathode arcs.
I've also read complaints that modern replicas of older designs, the KT88 was one I remembered, suffer from screen arcs.
It just seemed that an inexpensive resistor can save expensive tube (see below) without any consequence, so why not do it?
Typically the speaker's lowest impedance is equal to the nominal impedance used to design the output stage. That is, the speaker only ever looks like "more impedance" than designed, not less.
Separately, the screen resistor has most impact on the tube when the plate current is very high and the plate voltage is momentarily swinging very low, which results in the screen being a couple-hundred volts higher than plate voltage.
Screen voltage doesn't sag to be "close to the plate's potential" at that moment, otherwise you'd be in triode mode and have very much less power output.
Ahhh, thanks for clearing that up.
If I understand this, the speaker is sucking up piles of power, driving B+ into the ground. But the
separate screen supply is still fine, since it's not loaded. That's how B+ and Screen cross.
I was thinking of the screen as being derived from the B+, thinking that the screen uses a voltage divider, and that it has some capacitance to filter out fluctuations so I could see how it would have a reserve which would cause it to not as rapidly sag like B+.
The SSR:
1) Limits cathode-to-screen current, protecting each from excessive. Excessive cathode current caused by the omission of an SSR can cause the cathode bias resistor to burn out as well as damage the tube.
I personally wouldn't look to the screen resistor to limit cathode current; G1 voltage is much more effective in that role. It is also a benefit of cathode bias that the cathode resistor would burn open before the tube could destroy itself (or burn other components).
Guilty, but I plead poor wording!
My thought was that if B+ sags and the screen becomes a preferential plate, then limiting the current will prevent damage to the screen, saving the tube. Label that "goal".
That additional current would also cook the cathode resistor, but this is pretty much a "who cares" because the twenty cent resistor is negligible. It is the cooked tube at many orders of magnitude higher that is upsetting. It was more of an aside, not a means to protect a resistor. It was a, hey, look, the cathode resistor doesn't go up in flames! Woo-hoo! Bonus!
Thanks for the commentary. It explained some puzzling bits and pieces.