Hello!
I have seen the following circuit in "Acrosound_Ultra-Linear_Transformers_1955_gc.pdf" as part of a 100W PP amp example. What are the advantages (if any) against a more conventional one?
Simulation works. There is a balancing resistor between R4 and R3, omitted for simplicity.
Thank you!
Jose
I have seen the following circuit in "Acrosound_Ultra-Linear_Transformers_1955_gc.pdf" as part of a 100W PP amp example. What are the advantages (if any) against a more conventional one?
Simulation works. There is a balancing resistor between R4 and R3, omitted for simplicity.
Thank you!
Jose
First glance, U3 does nothing but hold a steady voltage on R3 .
U1 is just a buffer and U2 does all the work.
No advantage on standard double triodes.
U1 is just a buffer and U2 does all the work.
No advantage on standard double triodes.
In the amp is used as GNF input.First glance, U3 does nothing but hold a steady voltage on R3 .
U1 is just a buffer and U2 does all the work.
No advantage on standard double triodes.
Got a headache trying to follow that circuit, thanks for that 🙂Originally used in oscilloscopes, this is a cross-coupled phase inverter, also used by Audio Research
as a balanced driver stage (with cathode follower outputs and current source load) in their earlier amplifiers.
ALL of Bill Johnson's phase inverter uses a perverse version of the floating pharaphase inverter in front of all the symmetrical cross-coupling input to driver to output stages. So unnecessarily complicated. Count them, there are 12 tubes before the output stage!I count six tube elements used for the inverter in that AR amplifier. Obtuse.
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Every tube-geek should sleep on copies of Radiotron Designer's Handbook. The small black edition in even years, the big red edition in odd years. RDH answers most all basic test and topology questions.
The 3rd has all you really need but the 4th has the wonky stuff. In the 4th (red), "Exciting push-pull amplifiers" starts page 521. The Van Scoyoc is mentioned as a footnote to page 527, note C25. Sadly it is not in the general Radio-News but a supplement for selected readers.
The 3rd has all you really need but the 4th has the wonky stuff. In the 4th (red), "Exciting push-pull amplifiers" starts page 521. The Van Scoyoc is mentioned as a footnote to page 527, note C25. Sadly it is not in the general Radio-News but a supplement for selected readers.
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