• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Building an ECL82 Single Ended Amp ...

@nzoomed,

You will want to seperate the volume control between the sub and main amp. There will be times you get sick of your chest thumping from the sub and want to focus on the main speakers only. At these times you will be glad you seperate the volume control.
 
OK, ill consider that, your probably right. Only issue is i have to reach down to the sub and turn the knob on the sub itself.

If im happy with the sound i get from my amp, i will probably not bother with a sub if i get enough lows from it.
 
Since this thread is still alive, I built a cheap little amp with these ECL82's and found that they responded very well to cathode feedback and ultra-linear. Was the easiest way to get the most power out of them cleanly. Better than plate to plate feedback in this case.

Shoog
 
I used some salvaged console SE transformers which have a ultralinear winding (not strictly designed for UL - rather for modulating some of the radio circuits). relatively small but still very sweet sounding for what they were. Good for a few clean watts.

Shoog
 
Im at long last working on this amp build and will post some photos when complete.
Couple of questions - the large 680 ohm 5W wirewound resistor on the HT supply, is this supposed to act as a filter choke?

Each ECL82 will draw 35mA of current. So at 270V, it would be running at 9W of power per channel on the HT supply. Would this resistor run rather hot? Should I use a larger power rating?
 
Question to nzoomed: Did you build your amp according to the schematics shown in the very first posting? This leaves something unclear: Do you feed one or both channels via the 680R/5W resistor? Where do you measure 270Vdc? At the right (PSU) side or at the left (charge) side of it?


Best regards!
 
You may want to have some closer look, as the ECL82's maximum plate dissipation is rated at 7 watts. What are the voltage drops over the cathode resistor and the OT's primary?


Best regards!
This datasheet even has a higher current rating than the one i got my figures from.
http://drtube.com/datasheets/ecl82-philips1969.pdf

Says current on the anode is 41 mA, and 3.5mA on the triode so is 44.5mA going by that, which would even mean more power!

As you say, thats more wattage than the plate dissipation, but perhaps there is some losses on the output?
 
OK, thats true, forgetting about that.
Its a big problem with Class A amplifiers.
Ive got an amp i built with an EL34 and the plate will glow hot when idle. Im trying to increase the resistor on the cathode to try and make it use less current.
 
Something quite simple.
 

Attachments

  • ecl82.jpg
    ecl82.jpg
    60.5 KB · Views: 465