Above chassis views...


Once the under-chassis wiring was complete, the front panel knobs were fitted and identifying labels attached to the back panel and next to the valve sockets. The valves were plugged in for this photo opportunity, and then removed for initial testing of the amplifier.
First the line voltage was tested - it measured 244 volts AC. The line voltage in my workshop can range from 232 volts ( hot midsummer day, lots of airconditioners running ) to 250 volts ( mild weather, late evening ). A figure of 244VAC is quite close to the nominal 240, so test results have not been skewed by an incorrect line voltage.
Power was applied to the amplifier with no valves installed, while monitoring the B+ voltage, which rose quickly ( faster than the multimeter sampling rate ) to 240 volts DC. The heater voltage was 14.5VAC. There were no fireworks or clouds of acrid smoke, so power was removed, the capacitors allowed to bleed down, and the valves fitted. The speaker output was connected to an eight ohm dummy load, which was being monitored with an oscilloscope.
In the following description I will round measurements to sensible levels of accuracy - 333 ohms will become 330, 199.5 volts will become 200, and so on...
Power was reapplied and the B+ voltage and output stage cathode voltage were monitored as the valves warmed up. Voltages were within an acceptable range, so a 400Hz signal was applied to the input and with the master volume full on, the volume control was turned up. A reasonably clean sine wave was produced, but it had obvious crossover distortion, so the output stage cathode bias resistor was too high in value. The original resistor was 500 ohms - two 1k 1 watt resistors in parallel. A third 1k resistor was added, making the total 330 ohms. Crossover distortion was reduced significantly, so this arrangement was retained for further testing.
Some voltage measurements were taken. The B+ voltage at first turn-on with cold valves was 233VDC, but once the valves had warmed up, it fell to 216VDC - close to the expected result. The output stage cathode voltage was 16.5VDC, so with a cathode resistor of 330 ohms, Mr Ohm declares the cathode current to be 49.5mA. The voltage drop from cathode to anode is 200 volts, so the total dissipation in the valves is about 10 watts, or five watts each. I'm not considering screen current in these calculations. The maximum plate dissipation quoted for 6BM8's is 7 watts, so we are around two-thirds of the maximum - a typical figure for a class AB output stage.
Some measurements were taken to check the power output. The amplifier was driven to the onset of clipping - as observed on the oscilloscope trace. The output voltage was then measured, with a true-RMS multimeter, at 6.7 volts, so the power output was 6.7 squared, divided by 8, or 5.6 watts. The waveform was showing signs of crossover distortion while running clean, and serious crossover distortion when overdriven.
One reason for this was the rise in cathode bias voltage as the cathode current increased. The bias voltage rose from 16.5 volts at no signal, to 23.4 volts at maximum clean output. A way of reducing this effect is to use a zener diode to clamp the bias at a value slightly above the no-signal level. In this amplifier, an 18-volt zener was appropriate, but as none were immediately available, a 12 volt and a 5.6 volt diode were connected in series. Retesting the amplifier produced an output of 7.1 volts, so a power output of 6.3 watts. The waveform also showed much less crossover distortion.
More to come, but for now...
