• 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.

Very basic grid question????

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Yes, most valve grids have two sides, corresponding to two support rods. In most cases the external grid pin is attached to just one of these - this is sufficient as the whole grid is metal anyway. Some high frequency valves, intended for grounded grid operation at VHF/UHF, have two or more grid connections externally in order to reduce the inductance of the grid connection - this improves gain and stability.

When such a valve is used for audio it is usually necessary to add a grid stopper in order to deliberately reduce its RF gain and so avoid instability. Many people use both grid pins for audio and then a grid stopper is needed for each pin. I don't know why they do this, as I think a single connection and single stopper is sufficient.

Connecting pin2 to 8 externally is, at audio frequencies, merely paralleling an existing internal connection so does no harm or good. You can use either pin for the grid. 220 ohms seems a bit too small for a stopper - I would use at least 1K. There was some nonsense on here a few months ago about small value stoppers being better, and that seems to have sent people off down the wrong path. If you use both pins then you need a stopper on both pins.

I wonder whether your confusion is caused by the fact that the standard way of drawing a valve grid makes it look like a set of separate bits of metal when in fact it is all connected together. If you use a meter you will find a dead short between pins 2 and 8.
 
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