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    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
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    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Weird LTP issue

Greetings all,

I'm finishing an amp with an LTP made of ECC88 cascodes. There's a CCS in the tail, with a 500 Ohm balance pot between the cathodes.
I was adjusting the balance with my scope and a 1 kHz sine. Right channel went fine, identical sines on the scope, top anode voltage on both sides 80V (B+ = 300V)
Left channel, same sines, nice. Top anode voltage 80V on one side, 230V on the other!?!
I blamed the tubes, swapped a few, but I still get the same result.
Cathode voltages are all in the same area.
I have NO idea what's going on, I hope someone can shed some light on this?
The amp seems to work fine, but this just seems wrong.
Thanks in advance.
 
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Do you have grid stopper resistors on the bottom triodes?
The ECC88 can be a very good RF oscillator, even if you do not want it to be oscillating.
A DMM meter lead can either start or stop such an oscillation; DC voltages change when a stage is oscillating.

Please post the schematic.
A blindfolded archer can not hit the target.
 
Okay, I feel silly now...
I drew a schematic, then checked the amp again, and saw I connected the top grid to ground and not to 50V.... That must be it.

Regarding oscillation: at first I had used 100 Ohm gridstoppers. There was oscillation.
So I replaced them all with 2K2, that helped, but it was a difficult hard to reach operation. And yes it went wrong.
I'll correct it.

Thanks for the help anyway!