• 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.

Impedance seen by one anode in class B.

Say we have an output tranny that presents a load of 10K plate to plate. When just one valve is coducting and the other one is completely cut off, does the one conducting see a load of 2K5, that is to say one quarter of the plate to plate load impedance?
 
Say we have an output tranny that presents a load of 10K plate to plate. When just one valve is coducting and the other one is completely cut off, does the one conducting see a load of 2K5, that is to say one quarter of the plate to plate load impedance?
Yes.
That is the actual load drawn on the tube curves when you design the amplifier.

But it´s a custom (not a rule) , for convenience or simplicity, to label the transformer with the "end to end" impedance, "plate to plate", which being twice the voltage means 4 times the impedance.

Buit in principle at any given moment (supposing Class B of course), current path is from center tap to one *or* the other plate.
 
Okay, thanks. I was trying to figure out how much extra power output would be possible if the valves were actually able to turn fully on with zero voltage drop from cathode to anode and i was initially getting some silly figures. Thanks all.