... 36W PT and OT ... 2x 6L6 ...
... 344V on the plates, 310V on the screens and 20.0V on the cathodes. ...
I have the tube town 36W OT. It's 4k primary
Check out the
6L6GC data sheet. Follow along with the top graph on Page 6 (peak plate current when drive signal makes the control-grid-voltage equal to cathode-voltage; i.e., "0v" from G1 to K).
- You have 344v plate - 20v = ~325v plate-to-cathode. Put a dot on the X-axis at 325v and 0mA.
- A pair of 30w (6L6GC idling at 100%) can only make 30w audio in Class A (60w total heat, 50% efficient). You're idling cooler, getting more than 30w (or will you?), so this must be Class AB (remains to be seen below).
- When the Class AB output section is driven to peak output, one side is cut off. Primary Impedance of the remaining side is (plate-to-plate Impedance)/4 ==> 4kΩ/4 = 1kΩ.
- 325v / 1kΩ = 325mA ===> Put a dot at 0v, 325mA on the Y-axis. Connect the dots (Red line below) and you have your loadline.
- Look at your screen voltage: 310v screen - 20v cathode = 290v screen-to-cathode (what the tube actually "sees"). Round it up to "300v" because there happens to be an "Ec
2=300v" curve on our graph.
- Draw a line from the X-axis up along the loadline to the 300v curve for screen voltage (Blue line overlaid on the Red line below).
- Where this line touches the screen-voltage curve indicates the "peak plate current" and "minimum plate voltage" when we drive the output section to its maximum clean power output. Conveniently, this happens at 225mA Peak Current, and 100v plate-to-cathode.
- Find Peak Plate Voltage Swing: 325v plate-to-cathode - 100v = 225v Peak Voltage
- Find Peak Plate Current Swing: easy, it's 225mA Peak Current
- Calculate Peak Power Output: 225v Peak x 0.225A Peak = 50.6 Watts
Peak - Calculate RMS Power Output: Peak Power / 2 = 50.6w / 2 =
25.3 wattsWe could overlay a dissipation curve for the 6L6s, but it seems clear they wouldn't likely run too hot. Your amp could really have another 100v added to the power supply to get a higher power output. We could also re-run the calculations assuming Class A (plate-to-plate Impedance / 2, loadline goes through the idle bias point) to get a better estimate of power output, but I don't think it would change things too much.
As you hopefully see, what matter for
Power Output is how much supply voltage is available to become voltage-swing, how high plate current can get (due to screen voltage & OT impedance) to become current-swing, and what results from that. Your idle bias has more to do with how easy the output section is to drive and whether the tubes tend to overheat, than the actual power-output the stage will deliver.