Hi all,
After assembling a single ended, cathode biased 6BM8 guitar amp, I've stumbled on something fairly peculiar to me. I usually see people cathode bias at close to 100% (usually around 90%) max plate dissipation. The logic I've heard behind this is that every peak is followed by an equally low trough. I measured a -19 volt bias on the tube with a 730 ohm resistor, which equated to roughly 6.6 watts of plate dissipation at my 253v B+ (the 6BM8 is a 7 watt pentode). I figured that was that, and started running the amp HARD. Full volume, overdrive pedals and everything. After awhile I noticed the 6BM8 was red-plating. I rechecked my bias and found nothing wrong, so I kept playing. After it started red-plating a second time, I clipped my meter to the cathode resistor as I played. I measured a whopping 38 volts across the resistor, which calculated out to a staggering 13.2 watts of total dissipation! After subtracting the 1.5 watts of screen dissipation, I was still left with 11.7 watts of plate dissipation.
Is this safe??? I see people bias and run amps like this all the time, without any issues. If I were to hypothetically run the amp like this for several hours, wouldn't the plate eventually melt? That glowing red anode has me nervous already...
Thanks,
E