... Initially I was hoping to find a single tube that would put out 30w in class A (it would be a monster of a bottle of course) but that doesn't seem practical.
I found this KT88 circuit and it got me thinking, would putting a couple KT88s in parallel be a bad idea? ...
Echoing bmccowan, why does it have to be single-ended? One can do push-all class A and have a much easier time getting a usable output transformer.
For example, let's say you go single-ended with a pair of KT88s in parallel, and a reasonable supply voltage of 400v plate & screen. Idling at 100% dissipation,
this 40w tube passes 40w / 400v = 100mA per tube, or 200mA total.
You need an output transformer than can handle 200mA(!) of unbalanced DC, which will be a huge, air-gapped core. Hammond has you covered with the
1650SEA, but it weighs 11(!) pounds. A 100w Twin Reverb output transformer (
the 1750W here) weighs only 4 pounds, so you basically need 3x the weight to get less than 1/4 the power compared to a Twin Reverb. So the
schematic won't be the problem so much as doing mechanical design to decide how to reinforce your chassis to support that 11-pound beast (plus a big power transformer).
That 1640SEA has a 1250Ω primary, so if we assume the limiting-case of the KT88s swinging from 200mA idle up to 400mA and down to 0mA (200mA peak), then power output is:
200mA Peak x 1250Ω = 250v Peak
200mA peak x 250v peak = 50w peak
RMS Power = Peak Power / 2, so 50w Peak / 2 = 25w RMS ---> 1/4 of the Twin Reverb's power output
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To get more power output, we would need a higher primary impedance and somewhat lower idle (and peak) current.
Hammond's page for big single-ended OTs shows the 1650SEA had the highest unbalanced DC for the 30w class, reinforcing the need to move to lower idle current.
6550s and KT88s need to have high voltage on the plate to get their high power outputs. Meanwhile, screen voltage usually stays low, making it awkward to build a power supply that doesn't match the typical use-case of the screen volts being 1/2 the plate volts (like 600v plate, 300v screen) along with Class AB operation.
All that said, "25w" is close enough to "30w" being only -0.8dB and likely not a big enough difference to notice. However, think about the cost & weight for what is essentially a "
Deluxe Reverb that's 0.6dB louder"... I think you'll be very under-whelmed after the expense & hassle to build.