• 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.

Parallel SE 6V6 amplifier questions / design

Would parallel output tubes need both separate cathode resistors and capacitors and separate coupling caps or can i tie the grids together? Would save me cost on coupling caps. Have to add this would be cathode bias. My understanding is that i can just use 1 coupling cap and 1 grid leak cap.
 
Do we really need that powerful driver for 4x6V6s?
View attachment 1295224
Cin = Cgk + Cgp*(A+1) = 9 + 0.7*(9.8+1) = 16.56p
4*Cin = 66.24p
Impedance at 20Khz: ~120K. In parallel with the grid leak (470k/4, not sure whether we need to divide by 4).
Something like an ECC88 should be enough, right? Even if we take into account stray capacitances.
In triode connection looks like there are those additional 9 pF of g1-to-g2 to form Cgp and be multiplied by A+1? However the actual gain will be less, typically some 70% with 5K load. So it's about 87pf per tube....
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: jcalvarez
Would parallel output tubes need both separate cathode resistors and capacitors and separate coupling caps or can i tie the grids together? Would save me cost on coupling caps. Have to add this would be cathode bias. My understanding is that i can just use 1 coupling cap and 1 grid leak cap.
Why make your life so complicated with 4 tubes in parallel? 2 in parallel are ok in many cases. I often go for the PSE but 4 tubes? You could get 10W, 15W and 20W respectively in triode, UL and pentode with a single KT88. To get 20W in pentode mode, I use 410-420V anode voltage, 250V REGULATED on g2 and 5K load. Then fixed bias adjusted for an anode current of about 80-85 mA.
 
Last edited:
Why make your life so complicated with 4 tubes in parallel? 2 in parallel are ok in many cases. I often go for the PSE but 4 tubes? You could get 10W, 15W and 20W respectively in triode, UL and pentode with a single KT88. To get 20W in pentode mode, I use 410-420V anode voltage, 250V REGULATED on g2 and 5K load. Then fixed bias adjusted for an anode current of about 80-85 mA.

I have heard on the sound qualities of the 6V6 and the relatively low grid swing needed for full power.

If I were to go with the KT88 with the full pentode, UL, triode modes, what would be a good operating point? i..e all that would need to be changed is a switch and not the cathode bias .

Another tube I was looking at was the 7591a, but I cannot get more than a couple of watts out of it for triode it seems.
 
With a massive input capacitance of 4 6V6's in triode mode you might not get anything good. Multiplying the output tubes beyond 2 is not that straightforward.
For KT88 use 410-420V anode voltage for triode, UL and pentode with 80-85 mA. Then only need an additional 250V regulated supply when switch to pentode.
So it's not really a switch&play amp as you will need to readjust the bias when changing from pentode to UL or triode. But you could spend some time to find a good solution for that if want to switch easy from one to another.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AudioGeek
i will need to revisit this idea. Using a single output tube seems way easier than trying to parallel... especially as it seems you cannot get much power out of a triode connected 6V6. plus it would make the drive requirements potentially easier.

Thank you for all the help so far.