Guys... a cry for help!! Techno help that is.
I have recently got a Pioneer SX-410 receiver that I must service for a lady friend.
A friend of mine suggested that I must replace the SINGLE cathode resistor of the output section with four independent components for improved reliability. Apparently this single resistor blows up easily.
The tubes are 6BM8 / ECL82 in push-pull mode (I think).
All four the cathode connections of the tetrode part of the output tubes go to a single wire-wound resistor.
Should I use resistors with the same value or should the value be divided or multiplied by four?
See picture attached. The Cathode resistor is the black horizontal device on the bottom of the picture.
I have recently got a Pioneer SX-410 receiver that I must service for a lady friend.
A friend of mine suggested that I must replace the SINGLE cathode resistor of the output section with four independent components for improved reliability. Apparently this single resistor blows up easily.
The tubes are 6BM8 / ECL82 in push-pull mode (I think).
All four the cathode connections of the tetrode part of the output tubes go to a single wire-wound resistor.
Should I use resistors with the same value or should the value be divided or multiplied by four?
See picture attached. The Cathode resistor is the black horizontal device on the bottom of the picture.
Attachments
I will give you a hint - Mr Ohm's Law...
The resistor is used to raise the voltage of the cathode with respect to the grid (biasing it). The current going through all of those four tubes will give a certain voltage drop across that resistor. If you divide that current by four (individual cathode resistors, that is four in stead of one to conduct the same current), to maintain the same voltage drop you must do what to the resistance?
Ohm's Law
E=I*R
E=voltage, I=current, R=resistance.
Cheers,
Chris
(If current is reduced by a factor of four, then resistance must be raised by a factor of four to keep the same bias voltage. The individual cathode resistors will be four times the value of the single one. Your next question should then be 'what about the power dissipation of each of these resistors........)
The resistor is used to raise the voltage of the cathode with respect to the grid (biasing it). The current going through all of those four tubes will give a certain voltage drop across that resistor. If you divide that current by four (individual cathode resistors, that is four in stead of one to conduct the same current), to maintain the same voltage drop you must do what to the resistance?
Ohm's Law
E=I*R
E=voltage, I=current, R=resistance.
Cheers,
Chris
(If current is reduced by a factor of four, then resistance must be raised by a factor of four to keep the same bias voltage. The individual cathode resistors will be four times the value of the single one. Your next question should then be 'what about the power dissipation of each of these resistors........)
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