How is it possible to run a 12AX7 vacuum tube at 415VDC?

In summary, the schematic indicates that the 12AX7 inverter tube has a plate voltage of 416 VDC just like the schematic indicates. The max plate dissipation is 1 watt and a typical plate current would be 1.2 mA. Most likely anything around 3mA would red plate the tube if not less.
  • #1
Planobilly
440
105
Hi,
Here is the schematic link: http://www.classictubeamps.com/schematics/Mesa/Mesa%20Boogie%20Solo%2050%20Rectoverb%20schematic.pdf

The 12AX7 inverter tube has a measured plate voltage of 416 VDC just like the schematic indicates.

V1a rail voltage is 394VDC with a 200K plate resistor and a cathode resistor of 1K8 to ground.

I assume this amp design would eat preamp tubes on a regular basis!

What do you think?

Cheers,

Billy
 
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  • #2
U3b ? i see 215 volts across 100k cathode resistor so voltage across the tube is 416-215 = 201 v at 2.15 ma,

okay per this curve ?

http://www.drtube.com/datasheets/12ax7-sylvania1955.pdf page 3 of 4

plano12ax7.jpg
 
  • #3
Hi Jim,
So I am asking having 415VDC from plate to ground is OK on V3b? I measured 416VDC from plate to ground and the schematic indicates 415VDC. If so what does the 300V max plate voltage on the data sheet under ratings Indicate? I assume one can and often does exceed the max.

The max plate dissipation is 1 watt and a typical plate current would be 1.2 mA. with a plate voltage of 415 V the plate current would be 1/415=2.4mA X 70% = 1.7mA. Most likely anything around 3mA would red plate the tube if not less.

So...I ASSUME the plate voltage is not so important as long as the cathode resistor keeps the current flowing through the tube within a certain range. I also ASSUME there must be some max plate voltage that will cause the tube to arc. One may get away with a certain level of increased plate voltage but you will not exceed the max current flow for long

NOTE: Plate voltage does have an effect on the sound and headroom...so I understand why Mesa would want higher plate voltage...I just wonder how close to the limit of a 12AX7 they are and what is the effect on tube life.

Also I made a mistake V3 is not the inverter tube, it is a preamp tube in the lead channel.

I don't often see these high voltages on 12AX7 preamp tubes. I assume it is being done in this way in this amp to cut cost as I can think of other ways to produce high gain preamp circuits with a lot less stress on the tubes.

Billy

EDIT: I understand now. The voltage is referenced plate to cathode not to ground as would be the case with a grid bias tube.
 
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  • #4
Planobilly said:
EDIT: I understand now. The voltage is referenced plate to cathode not to ground as would be the case with a grid bias tube.

I knew you'd figure that out ...

look at the datasheet
http://www.drtube.com/datasheets/12ax7-sylvania1955.pdf

there's limits on heater to cathode voltage too. I never thought about that before, i suppose heater positive would steal cathode current away from plate ?
 
  • #5
Planobilly said:
EDIT: I understand now. The voltage is referenced plate to cathode not to ground as would be the case with a grid bias tube.

yes, note that the cathode is lifted above gnd by that 100k resistor
 
  • #6
Thanks guys,

I also never gave any thought to heater to cathode voltages. I assume that would be the limiting factor as to how high the plate voltage could go. We are already at 215 volts on the cathode with the data sheet indicating a 200V max.

Billy
 
  • #7
jim hardy said:
there's limits on heater to cathode voltage too. I never thought about that before, i suppose heater positive would steal cathode current away from plate ?
The real limiting factor (danger) is insulation breakdown between heater and cathode. AFAIK it is only the outer surface of the cathode that is coated with the electron emitting material, often an oxide of Barium or Thorium.
 
  • #8
I think the reason for "pushing" these limits with 12AX7 tubes have several causes.

1.There are measurable differences in the "sound" a tube exhibit due to various relationships of plate voltage and current flow through the tube.

2. There is a need for higher gain in preamp stages to produce certain "sounds" associated with certain styles of "modern" guitar music such as "metal music" for example. For other styles of "modern" guitar music high gain is not useful or wanted.

3. The lack of availability and cost of other tubes that could be used as preamp tubes. The 12AX7 is the most common tube in use today for preamp tube and is widely available.
There are other options for preamp tubes as in the schematic below.

BO1GSYG.jpg
 
  • #9
Photos I took of a custom DC 30 I repaired a few days ago.

4lFFPWX.jpg


4lFFPWX.jpg


Xd9Q8oP.jpg


Cost was not an issue with this amp. A standard Matchless DC 30 cost in excess of $4000 dollars. This one was not standard and I have no idea what it cost. The clean channel used 12AX7 preamp tubes. The lead channel used the EF86.

bWs2v7V.jpg
 
  • #10
The above amp is an example of an amp used in a true commercial environment. As costly as it may be, there in fact three on hand. The cost represents on a very small fraction of the equipment used to produce a concert. The mixing board used for this band for example cost in excess of $250,000, The cost to put on a show in today's world is in the millions.
 
  • #11
Planobilly said:
Matchless DC 30
http://www.matchlessamplifiers.com/amps/30-watt-and-over/c-30/
Thirty very conservatively rated watts from a quartet of EL-84’s,
EL84/6BQ5 !
Great tube . I used a pair of them for the low frequency center channel in my high school stereo amp project. When i got to college it was voted best system in the dorm.

Ahhhh nostalgia - thanks bill .
 
  • #12
Your welcome Jim!

Do you still have the amp?? If so, we want to see photos!

One has to have been around for a while to have much of a real concept of "nostalgia"...lol

Vacuum tubes use in audio are actually on the rise as is the use and production of vinyl records. Some of us have never been much impressed with MP3...lol

Vacuum tube technology is old enough to be "new" again. Better than transistor amps? Perhaps not or perhaps yes. In many ways it is all a matter of perception. Because we don't have a machine to measure perception the debate will continue...lol

To me the question is meaningless to begin with. Tubes do stuff transistors can not and transistors do stuff tubes can not.

Cheers,

Billy
 
  • #13
Planobilly said:
Do you still have the amp?? If so, we want to see photos!
You know those things you regret ? The output transformer i'd bought were bargain basement Olsen brand, plastic encased
they swelled, split and shorted after about ten years
i remember a twinge of sadness when i put "Old Paint" on the trashpile .
i replaced it with a Harmon-Kardon TDK3 .

Planobilly said:
Because we don't have a machine to measure perception the debate will continue...lol
i've had a pet theory since 1970's when solid state took over
and it's catching on now
Tube amps are a current source and that's why you need those 100 ohm resistors across output to protect the transformer.
remember your basics - a current source is high impedance and a voltage source is low impedance
loudspeaker drive by current source versus voltage source has to give different cone motion
it's the amplifier output impedance. It controls 'damping' .

https://www.passdiy.com/pdf/cs-amps-speakers.pdf
...
I hooked up a Son of Zenamplifier (Audio Electronics 1997 #2) to a pair of Fostex 208Es in sealed enclosures. The Son of Zen
operates without feedback and has an output impedance of about 16 ohms. This nets a
damping factor of 0.5, miniscule compared to the 100 to 1000 you can achieve with regular
solid-state amplifiers.
With the low damping factor, the Fostex became a totally different speaker.
 
  • #14
I often real about the experiments and serious testing applied to stereo amplifiers/speakers. I seldom see anything near this level of testing and experimenting as it relates to guitar amps/speakers. Perhaps I just have not dug deep enough.

In my own mind I put these two types of amps into two categories. One, sound production amps and two, sound reproduction amps. ( I am not speaking about voltage/current here) The differences are huge.

The signal coming from an electric guitar has substantially less band width than the total audible band width. This being more or less in the range of a few Hz to around 5000 Hz including harmonics. Due to this fact, we need a speaker designed to produce those frequencies. The guitar amp also needs to amplify those frequencies.

While it is possible to plug a microphone into a guitar amp and sing or play a flute, that same set up in both cases produce very unacceptable results.

Trying to compare stereo audio designs to guitar audio designs does not work well because the two things are made for widely differing purposes.

Add in the complexities of purposely altering the guitar input signal to produce other sounds and effects the guitar amp moves even farther away from the typical stereo amp. To add insult to injury there is no real physical connection from the user to the stereo system but a very complex and real physical contact between the guitar player and the amp.

Obviously there are other musical instrument sound reinforcement amps other than guitar amps. Those amps are designed to accommodate the needs of the instrument in question, keyboards for example which again are vastly different from guitar amps.

Too many multisyllabic words in this post...lol...getting beyond my spelling abilities...lol

Cheers,

Billy
 
  • #15
You guys touched on the debate of how one sounds vs the other.Frankly both from what I know and what I have heard while listening I think there is no audible difference between tubes vs transistors , the real audible difference comes from the difference in schematic , the layout itself and sometimes part quality.
I have heard differences between two transistor amps , and I don't think it's because of the transistors themselves rather the design and layout.
the most common difference I can hear between amps is the detail in reproduction, playing the same record one reproduces some small bits of drum and guitar while the other one makes them inaudible at that place etc.
I think that's all there is , everything else like talking about colors and warmth of an amplifier is slowly going into magic and in magic everything is possible.
 
  • #16
@Planobilly
Love those photos. The resistors actually have readable color codes! The Chinese ones these days make me think I'm going color blind.
 
  • #17
Hi Tom,

I assume Phil the designer got them new from the normal supply chain. Everything in the amp was well done. Carbon Comp resistors...not sure why anyone would use them in today's world. They are great if you like noise...lol

Well..I guess if you are important enough to have your name as the serial number on a amp then....The good news is that Nick Jonas is a super nice kid who has not let his fame go to his head. He always says "thank you" and "yes sir" and is super nice to work with.

For me, I am going to Marathon now to go fishing! No more amps this week! Having said that, I am sure I will have to work on the auto pilot on the boat...it has been acting up a good bit lately.

See you guy in a day or two.

Billy
 
  • #18
Planobilly said:
I am going to Marathon now to go fishing!

i heard the hogfish are out

good luck !
 
  • #19
Well...back to the work bench!

We left the dock at 5 am and finished cleaning up the mess around 9 pm last night. We caught the fish in the photo below in 830 foot on the bottom. Normally I would use a 10 pound lead weight but yesterday the current in the Gulf Stream was running close to 4 knots requiring 14 pounds of lead to get the bait on the bottom.

The amount of electronics needed to do this is pretty large. It has taken a year or two to learn how to use the equipment, some of which I designed myself. We now can catch these fish when ever we want to for the most part. Well...a little luck is also part of the deal..lol Running this little 28 foot boat 50 plus miles offshore is starting to kick my butt. Don't ever get old..!..lol

9JuxMQI.jpg


Cheers,

Billy
 
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  • #20
Wow.

When i was a kid we caught them a mile off Miami Beach.

Warsaw ?
 
  • #21
50 miles off coast into the Atlantic ocean? that must be pretty deep.
 
  • #22
Hi Jim,

I wish things were like it use to be. The Florida coast is fished out to a large extent. That holds true for many places in the Bahamas also. The requlations are so complex now days you need a lawyer and a marine biologist to go fishing here in Florida. We are fishing in the Bahamas more and more where regulatory issues are less complex and the fishing is better if you go to very remote areas. We fish in the Cay Sal bank but it requires going to Cat Cay to clear customs and is over a three hundred mile trip from Marathon. Three hundred miles and three hundred gallons of fuel. At least fuel prices are down at the moment. Last fuel I got in the Bahamas was $6 per gallon. Pretty pricey fish!

Salvador...The ocean only gets to about 3500 feet between the Florida Keys and the Bahamas.

Enough fishing...back to work...lol

Billy
 
  • #23
Planobilly said:
I wish things were like it use to be. The Florida coast is fished out to a large extent.

I recognized my remark as negative just now, sorry for that.
Nostalgia - i entered a 112 lb grouper in the Miami fishing tournament 1959...
So your picture took me back fifty years,
Thanks !
(we ate grouper for months)

On a brighter note
i noticed your Hopkins-Carter shirt - my favorite marine store... more nostalgia . i grew up within bicycle distance
 
  • #24
Hi Jim,

I shopped at Hopkins-Carter for years until about two years ago when my buddy Eddie and part of the crew left to open their on store. I still shop there some times.
I also remember how it was back years ago and I am glad I got to experience those days. Key West was a sleepy drinking village with a fishing problem..lol

The issue for me is not the lack of fish but the ever changing regulations and limits on what one can catch and the increasing cost. We spend around $1000 a day in direct cost to offshore fish in our tiny little boat. Not even to mention the 200K tied up in the boat and the gear. I have had the Florida Wildlife Commission stop me and say I had broken the law when they did not know the difference between a Mutton snapper and a Lane snapper! Well..I like to fish so we just deal with the changing conditions...so far...lol

Billy
 

Related to How is it possible to run a 12AX7 vacuum tube at 415VDC?

1. How does a vacuum tube work?

A vacuum tube is a type of electronic device that uses a vacuum to control the flow of electrons. It consists of a glass tube with metal electrodes inside, and when a voltage is applied, it creates a cathode (negative) and an anode (positive) that allow electrons to flow through the tube.

2. Why is 415VDC used for running a 12AX7 vacuum tube?

The 12AX7 vacuum tube is designed to operate at high voltages, typically around 300VDC. However, some guitar amplifiers use a higher voltage of 415VDC to achieve a higher gain and distortion in the sound. This voltage is within the safe operating range for the 12AX7 tube.

3. What are the risks of running a 12AX7 vacuum tube at 415VDC?

The main risk is that the tube may overheat and fail, as higher voltages can cause an increase in tube current and heat generation. This could potentially damage other components in the amplifier as well. It is important to make sure the amplifier is designed to handle this higher voltage and that the tube is properly biased for safe operation.

4. Can a 12AX7 vacuum tube be run at even higher voltages?

Technically, yes, a 12AX7 tube can be run at higher voltages. However, it is not recommended as it may significantly reduce the lifespan of the tube and increase the risk of failure. It is important to consult the manufacturer's specifications and guidelines for safe operating voltages for the specific tube being used.

5. Is it possible to run a 12AX7 vacuum tube at lower voltages?

Yes, it is possible to run a 12AX7 tube at lower voltages, but it will affect the performance and sound of the tube. Lower voltages will result in lower gain and a cleaner sound. It is important to note that running the tube at voltages significantly lower than the recommended operating range may also cause damage to the tube.

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