H
Heritage Softail
New member
Probably has weird mids....
hunter":3836df0h said:MYLILSS":3836df0h said:is there any pricing info available on these ?
They will be very expensive. Like 1.5-2x SLO price
At the moment there are just two prototypes in existence.
I agree that the head must have Midi. Or otherwise hello to tap dancing on the 13 button footswitch![]()
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Just a few notes.glpg80":39kvx2o4 said:Transmitter tubes in guitar amps
I would also estimate the B+ to be around 800-1kV or so.
Also the chassis has to be very large to have physical distance of some parts of the amp due to arc-over.
tube which is most likely a gigantic dual-envelop triode.
Im no expert but 100w of class A power would be enough to knock you over with one powerchord. I dont have alot of experience with Class A amps but a friends Vox AC30 was insanely loud with 30w of class A...mrkmas":wbhddevx said:That is quite the amp.
100w class A means that thing will heat your whole house.
MOAAH":32a7id1e said:Just a few notes.glpg80":32a7id1e said:Transmitter tubes in guitar amps
I would also estimate the B+ to be around 800-1kV or so.
Also the chassis has to be very large to have physical distance of some parts of the amp due to arc-over.
tube which is most likely a gigantic dual-envelop triode.
The 833 is a single triode AF power amplifier and modualator that can also be used as a RF power amp and oscillator.
Heater volts 10volts, heater current 10amps.
Amplification factor 35 with grid @ -10V and plate MA @ 200.
Typical ratings as a class B AF power amp:
Plate voltage 3000DC
Zero signal plate current 100ma
Max signal plate current 750ma
Effective load resistance p2p 9500ohms
Max signal driving power 20 watts
Max signal power output 1650 watts
(RCA transmitting tubes up to 4 KW input, 1956)
Chassis size(although a safe layout is a must) is no where as important as amp and volt ratings. i.e., Hams commonly use shielded ignition cable for wiring RF circuits carrying more than 2500 volts. As for heaters carrying heavy current, no. 10 or 12 wire is common.
See RIAA Handbook chapter on 'Construction Practices' for more details. My version is 1953 but the same laws apply today, we just may have better insolation and stuff now.
LOL, English be danged, I only speak plain American.Gainzilla":2wg6xoyz said:MOAAH":2wg6xoyz said:Just a few notes.glpg80":2wg6xoyz said:Transmitter tubes in guitar amps
I would also estimate the B+ to be around 800-1kV or so.
Also the chassis has to be very large to have physical distance of some parts of the amp due to arc-over.
tube which is most likely a gigantic dual-envelop triode.
The 833 is a single triode AF power amplifier and modualator that can also be used as a RF power amp and oscillator.
Heater volts 10volts, heater current 10amps.
Amplification factor 35 with grid @ -10V and plate MA @ 200.
Typical ratings as a class B AF power amp:
Plate voltage 3000DC
Zero signal plate current 100ma
Max signal plate current 750ma
Effective load resistance p2p 9500ohms
Max signal driving power 20 watts
Max signal power output 1650 watts
(RCA transmitting tubes up to 4 KW input, 1956)
Chassis size(although a safe layout is a must) is no where as important as amp and volt ratings. i.e., Hams commonly use shielded ignition cable for wiring RF circuits carrying more than 2500 volts. As for heaters carrying heavy current, no. 10 or 12 wire is common.
See RIAA Handbook chapter on 'Construction Practices' for more details. My version is 1953 but the same laws apply today, we just may have better insolation and stuff now.
LOL, Ya gotta love it when even after explaining it English, it still sounds like some impossible to understand foreign language....
Whatever you want to call it, it might as well have been written out in Sanscrit or Heiroglyphics...MOAAH":2i4ui4sb said:LOL, English be danged, I only speak plain American.Gainzilla":2i4ui4sb said:MOAAH":2i4ui4sb said:Just a few notes.glpg80":2i4ui4sb said:Transmitter tubes in guitar amps
I would also estimate the B+ to be around 800-1kV or so.
Also the chassis has to be very large to have physical distance of some parts of the amp due to arc-over.
tube which is most likely a gigantic dual-envelop triode.
The 833 is a single triode AF power amplifier and modualator that can also be used as a RF power amp and oscillator.
Heater volts 10volts, heater current 10amps.
Amplification factor 35 with grid @ -10V and plate MA @ 200.
Typical ratings as a class B AF power amp:
Plate voltage 3000DC
Zero signal plate current 100ma
Max signal plate current 750ma
Effective load resistance p2p 9500ohms
Max signal driving power 20 watts
Max signal power output 1650 watts
(RCA transmitting tubes up to 4 KW input, 1956)
Chassis size(although a safe layout is a must) is no where as important as amp and volt ratings. i.e., Hams commonly use shielded ignition cable for wiring RF circuits carrying more than 2500 volts. As for heaters carrying heavy current, no. 10 or 12 wire is common.
See RIAA Handbook chapter on 'Construction Practices' for more details. My version is 1953 but the same laws apply today, we just may have better insolation and stuff now.
LOL, Ya gotta love it when even after explaining it English, it still sounds like some impossible to understand foreign language....
But but but...Gainzilla":2ow80b2u said:Whatever you want to call it, it might as well have been written out in Sanscrit or Heiroglyphics...