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In Reply to: RE: Class A push-pull- something to consider posted by PakProtector on December 17, 2024 at 03:24:29
The plate resistor of the driver is also the screen resistor of the associated output tube. The coupling cap coming off of the plate of the driver is driving G1 of the power tube.
The schematic shows the driver plate resistor as tied to the screen and the screens then tied to the plate of the opposite power tube. Both versions will work.
In my amp and also in the schematic the driver plate resistor is a 12K 2 Watt device. The schematic as shown was glued to the bottom panel.
Follow Ups:
Here's a PDF of the user manual that includes EV's description of the circuit and a schematic. It's a PDF, so it can be rotated by most browsers. What I found most interesting about this is the statement that the output transformer is 1/4 the usual impedance.
-With the lower turns ratio the output transformer has wider bandwidth due to lower distributed capacitance. You don't even need it to be a transformer- it can work as an autoformer too (but you have to be more careful about DC Offsets).
The original Circlotron patents employed a bootstrapped driver circuit like you see in the schematic. But I think that is higher distortion and you can get into issues with blocking distortion and preventing thermal runaway of the output tubes. EV ran into a problem with this and so reduced the output tube grid resistor value to 100K and also increased the value of the coupling cap to maintain the timing constant.
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