• 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.

1635 "Class B" dual triode - useful or not?

I guess you can find such an OT, but with reduced freq. response.
https://edcorusa.com/collections/tube-amplifier-push-pull-output-transformer/primary-impedance_12k-ω
40 to 18K Hz
I generally figure 8K as the max for good freq. response. 10K starts getting shaky. There may well be more expensive OTs around that can do full range, but are they worth it for an unknown tube. A Junk-box/radio OT at high primary Z is likely to be low power rated and reduced freq. response.

Huh, I just looked at my OT list here, and I have one of those 12K Edcor OTs. I think I got it some while back so I could test wimpy tubes like sub-mini's.
 
Last edited:
Looking through my tube stash I see that I have some 1635s. My impression is that they are somewhat like 6N7s but with substantial differences. I did a search here and don't see any discussion of this tube, so I'm curious - does this look useful or not? https://frank.pocnet.net/sheets/049/1/1635.pdf

Paralleled, they might make nice voltage amplifiers. The 6N7 does, with a gain between a 6SN7 and a 6SL7, just right for some circuits. Don't know what the gain of the 1635 is, though, does anyone?
 
The Toroidy OT specs do look good. They must be using a sectionalized primary winding to keep distributed capacitance down. I can't find any reference to their winding patents. Or just using a toroid winder that can do progressive (chevron) winds.

The other way to get high Z with good bandwidth performance would be a Circlotron OT setup (1/2 the primary turns), but inconvenient B+.

Or a totem pole drive, but that doesn't set well with tubes (floating heater, one floating grid drive).
 
Last edited: