I sort of did this already but didn't write down the values (I repeated and wrote values below)
The first ac value is with guitar set to 7 (just starting to OD)
The 2nd ac value is with guitar set to 9 (in OD)
The Amp Volume was set rather low about 2 or 3
Thanks for this!
Power Tubes:
Bias: 14v
Light Dist: 10v (probably occasional peaks over that)
Strong Dist: 27v (tube is being slapped silly)
Note: The DC volts at the cathodes during the "Strong Distortion" signal levels almost certainly has shifted from 14v to something nearer the 27v peak grid signal. The bias-shift is normal for overdriven output tubes, and the near doubling of the signal level (27v peak grid-drive vs 14v idle bias) probably means your signal is half-wave rectified at the 6BL7 grids.
Heavy distortion (literally "
10 pounds of s@%t in a 5lb bag").
Phase Inverter:
Bias: 2.2v (68v - 65.8v on either side of the 470Ω resistor)
Light Dist: 0.6v (probably stays clean for all signals)
Strong Dist: 2v (almost certain distortion on peaks)
Note: Your measurements at the grids of the phase inverter are invalid, because they are "bootstrapped" (
see "Input Impedance" here). That actual bias has to be measured as the difference between voltages on either side of the cathode-bias resistor (470Ω).
Gain:
V2B Smaller Signal: 10v (output tube grid) / 0.46v (V2B grid) = ~21.7x
V2B Larger Signal: 27v / 1.4v = 19.3x
V2A Smaller Signal: 8.5v (output tube grid) / 0.6v (V2B grid) = ~14.2x
V2A Larger Signal: 27v / 2v = 13.5x
Note: Gain to each output is unequal (expected with this type of inverter when using same-plate-load resistances) so the inverter always adds at least a trace of 2nd harmonic distortion. But notice how the
gain seems to drop with higher signal level? A small amount of that is likely the inverter reaching its limits and squashing peaks; most of that is due to heavy grid-current at the output tubes clamping the output of the phase inverter. Stage-gain isn't dropping so much as it is being peak-limited because the power section is grossly overdriven.
Stage 2:
Stage 1:
Both have peak grid signals well below their bias voltage, so we probably don't need to worry about these stages distorting prematurely. That said, if the goal was to keep them clean then they are biased/loaded improperly. Each is biased so it has 2+ volts of input headroom in one direction, and more like 8 volts of input headroom in the other direction. See the location of the Blue Dot on the 6SN7 loadline at bottom.
If the goal is to "maximize the clean" for these 2 stages, then cathode resistors should be larger, plate current and/or plate load resistors smaller, and plate voltage higher. A good starting point is a plate voltage of 0.6x to 0.7x of supply voltage (which is a common rule of thumb for triodes).
That said, signal levels are typically low, so perhaps lack of center-biasing for these stages is not impacting things too much. It's hard to say without knowing the peak AC Volts output from the plate & before the Volume and Master Volume controls.
Bottom Line: This iteration of the circuit is flat-out pummeling the output tubes; it couldn't do anything but distort. Perhaps repeat the procedure with your original iteration to find out how they differ in signal-levels vs bias at each stage.
