| Senior Member |
 |
Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 2:39 am Posts: 2537 Location: Rohnert Park, CA
|
|
First of all, which amp circuit are you even working on?
Second off...why do you think the plate voltage should be 213? What cathode resistors does each side of V1 have? What's the value of the V2 cathode resistor on pin 3?
Plate voltage is dependent on how hot or cold the stage is biased which is determined via the CATHODE resistor, NOT the plate resistor. Two stages using the same plate resistors but different cathode resistors will have quite a bit of difference in plate voltage because one stage is drawing more current than the other.
However, on an amp with a shared cathode circuit on V1 (where pins 3 and 8 are tied together) you will in fact see the same voltage on pin 1 and 6 since they use the same cathode resistor and as such are biased the same, which would be in the neighborhood of 150 volts. I'd change that plate resistor back to its stock value of 100K otherwise you're dropping the gain of that side of the tube way down.
Only on a split cathode where pin 3 is on a 820R resistor and pin 8 is on a 2.7K resistor will you see Pin 1=150V and Pin 6=210ish. This is because the b side of the tube is biased colder and not drawing as much current so the plate voltage won't drop as much as the other side that is biased hotter and drawing more current. But on shared cathode circuits that use plate resistors that are identical in value you will see the same plate voltage on both pin 1 and 6.
_________________ There's just that fine line between stupid and clever - Nigel Tufnel
|
|