A Low Voltage Vacuum Tube OTL Audio Amplifier

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ต.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 300

  • @akkudakkupl
    @akkudakkupl 2 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    The speaker doesn't like DC through the coil. That is constant heat dissipation that gets overlaid on whatever AC power from reproducing music. It needs to be coupled through a capacitor (like 1000uF, larger is better) and the quiescent current has to be at least Vcc/speaker impedance 😉

    • @AllThingsOnePlace
      @AllThingsOnePlace 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Yeah, no decoupling capacitor is the first thing I noticed! Depending on exact impedance of the loudspeaker at low frequency (assuming it is near 8 ohm) that tiny speaker isn't going to be able to produce much on the low frequency side so a 200 microfarad capacitor should be plenty for a roughly -3 dB roll off of around 100 Hz. Still results aren't too bad considering the DC. What value resistor would you use on the cathode?

    • @akkudakkupl
      @akkudakkupl 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@AllThingsOnePlace I wouldn't use a resistor, active load would be better. After thinking again about it, you would need somewhat less resistance than speaker impedance.
      A better way would be to use an inductor (but a very large value, maybe a classic fluorescent lamp balast?) on the plate and setup the bias point with negative voltage on the grid. outputs Would still be coupled through a capacitor. Should allow for 4 times more output power with only twice higher quiescent current?

    • @AllThingsOnePlace
      @AllThingsOnePlace 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@akkudakkupl Yeah, giant inductor would be best for performance, wouldn't really fit the project though. It isn't going to be efficient ever since its a class A amp but yeah squeezing as much of that AC into the loudspeaker as possible is one way to go.
      I say resistor simply to match the project or make it work within the confines of the current project. Swap the 100k for a much lower value (has to meet power requirements of course), add capacitor to the loudspeaker (possibly hide it inside the already made enclosure)? I guess could put a lamp ballast under the whole box and route the wires around it too.
      Either way, I am very new to tubes and slowly learn a little on each video I watch.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I actually did try to put a few different caps in series when testing the design to remove any DC through the coil, but no matter what size cap I tried, it always decimated the sound. Like removed greater than 90% of volume. It could be that I just didn't get a large enough capacitor, but I think it mostly had to do with the insanely low voltages I'm running at.
      The 12B4A was moving around 40mA through each tube, which at 48V should mean an internal resistance of about 1200 ohms per tube. With six in parallel that should be something like 200 ohms of series resistance with the speaker.
      I think the impedance is just so ridiculously mismatched that adding a series capacitor just wrecked whatever weird balance I had going on here.
      Or I could be totally off the mark, this is all uncharted territory for me!

    • @akkudakkupl
      @akkudakkupl 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@UsagiElectric it was because the tubes have to run current at least equal to VCC/speaker impedance anyway, so it can swing up or down. This is why class A is ineficient.

  • @diegozordan6376
    @diegozordan6376 2 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I'm sure that if you connect the amp to a 10" speaker it will sound even better! And of course with a two way, nice project as always!

    • @emmanueleferrarotto2986
      @emmanueleferrarotto2986 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      And don't forget the water cooling

    • @robnic52
      @robnic52 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      You are right, would be a better test with a high efficiency full range hi-fi speaker. Bigger speaker with the extra bass content takes a ton more current to drive. You should use a capacitor to protect the speaker from any DC, I can't remember if there are any caps in the pre speaker circuit? No there aren't. 🙂 Also restrict the bass frequencies to the audible range by trying different (smaller) cathode bypass cap values in the preamp stages, 100uF seems flabby. Saves wasting energy driving sub audible bass.
      Try losing or a bigger resistor in the neg feedback loop to the first preamp? Might drive a real speaker?? Exciting stuff.

    • @diegozordan6376
      @diegozordan6376 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes, actually pro audio speakers like the brand Faital Pro have 96, 98db that will work great on low power amps that needs high efficency. I've tried that with my 1w diy tube amp, also compression drivers have 105db minimum in most of the cases

    • @diegozordan6376
      @diegozordan6376 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      But maybe is better the idea of a full range as you mentioned, so you don't have to worry about pairing with a driver, crossover..

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Thank you!
      I really wanted to stuff it all in that tiny footprint, but in the future, I'm definitely going to spread things out and run more speaker for some proper full on sound!
      I happen to have a handful of 6146 power pentodes, that when triode strapped can move well more than double what the 12B4A can at a given voltage, so some of those mixed with a bigger speaker and maybe some proper design to eliminate DC bias and I think we can get something really wild going on!

  • @vincei4252
    @vincei4252 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I wouldn't put DC thru the speaker at the cathode, at the very least in this topology put a large capacitor in series with the speaker. The DC conditions at the cathode will be maintained and only the AC will pass thru to the speaker.

    • @fabriziobrutti1205
      @fabriziobrutti1205 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nope, you would have a 100k output impedence, check out class A amplifiers

    • @vincei4252
      @vincei4252 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@fabriziobrutti1205 You have no idea what you are talking about. Maybe *YOU* should go lookup what it means to bypass a cathode at AC. The worst thing about your comment is total lack understanding of what would happen to a low impedance voice call having DC running through it.

    • @fabriziobrutti1205
      @fabriziobrutti1205 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@vincei4252 actually i didn't get your answer about the DC through the voice coil(?)... I know that there mustn't be any, or otherwise the speaker will get some damage, so a capacitor must be put in series, but by what I know the 100k resistance should be replaced with an 8 Ohm resistance... Anyway I'll check the part about bypassing a chatode at AC, since I don't know much about vacuum tubes (btw I'm just 16)😅

    • @zinckensteel
      @zinckensteel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes! It is very possible to split the DC and AC paths of the cathode signal.

    • @vincei4252
      @vincei4252 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@fabriziobrutti1205 That's fine. In a nutshell at AC, provided the capacitor is big enough, it looks like a short and the impedance seen at the cathode to AC is the impedance of the speaker. If you look at transistor circuits you will see something called emitter degeneration where a capacitor is placed across the emitter resistor or portion of the total emitter resistance. Doing this has the magical effect of increasing the gain of a common emitter amplifier because the AC impedance seen at the emitter is lower but the DC conditions at the emitter are maintained for biasing purposes. Look it up it's interesting stuff. Good luck in your journey.

  • @arongooch
    @arongooch 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I don't think you should have to explain yourself for the tube type readouts. Anyone who knows tubes surely understand what you're saying and who cares, say it as you like!

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you!
      The truth is that it did bother a lot of people, and so I figured I would just let them know that there is a logical reason behind why I said it the way I did, but I also figured I would have a bit of fun with the filming of it too. Filming that section was actually a blast!

  • @stefandumoulin1872
    @stefandumoulin1872 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Are you a metalhead?
    Man you just keep getting cooler every video.
    Amazing work as always!

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Thank you so much!
      That depends a bit on what you define as metal. I always listen to music when I work, but as a translator, I can't listen to music with lyrics or my translations end up... strange, haha. So, over the past few years I've gotten big into different types of instrumental metal. Mick Gordon's work on the Doom and Doom Eternal soundtracks are perfect, and Andrew Hulshult and David Levy both knocked it out of the park with The Ancient Gods soundtrack. I listen to all three of those on the regular. Hulshult's work in general is really fantastic (both the Dusk and Prodeus soundtracks get a lot of playtime too). If I need something a little less... violent, I tend to fall back on Animals as Leaders, the Algorithm, or some instrumental Djent (which is actually what's playing in the background right now).
      Instrumental metal is a bit tough to find, but on the occasions some gems show up, like some of Meshuggah's stuff!

    • @gammaleader96
      @gammaleader96 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric
      Maybe you want to take a look at Master boot records on youtube, it has some Doom vibes to it and is purely instrumental :)

  • @JendaLinda
    @JendaLinda 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Very nice project, although I would stick to the design with an output transformer, it's not too hard to the tubes.
    Instead of trying to find a suitable output transformer, you could use a speaker designed for 70 Volt or 100 Volt wiring, the kind of speaker used for playing background music and making announcements in public places. Such speakers have high-to-low impedance conversion transformer builtin, so it should be possible to connect them to the tube amplifier directly.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Thank you!
      And for sure, using an output transformer makes way more sense, but the idea of just brute forcing power into a speaker by running a bunch of tubes in parallel was just way too appealing to me for some reason. I think it's because my simple mind just says "More toob is good," haha!

    • @wramrobertodecamargoaccors4679
      @wramrobertodecamargoaccors4679 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Agreed! OTLs are more of a seductive theoretical concept than a worthwhile audible result in practical terms.

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 19 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      ​​@@UsagiElectric, yo soy del mismo pensamiento, filosofía e intuiciones,
      Y sin trafo menos histerésis y mayor calidad, y a pelear con ello, tendrá que probar algunas opciones y compromisos, pero recuerde se llevan vendiendo 50 años amplificadores de esta topología para los oídos mas exquisitos del Hifi mundial , por algo será y sin transformador.
      Incluso puede poner las dos opciones con un interruptor, osea conmutable sin trafo con salida con condensador o reactancia y con trafo, para comparar diferencias, y mostrar al mundo de lo que es capaz el otl en linealidad y cuidado de la señal original de audio.
      Eso si por dios, un altavoz de calidad de al menos 12 pulgadas y si es posible 103 decibelios, con un altavoz toda frecuencia mejor, veras potenciado el volumen final audible ( con la misma potencia ) Eminence trabaja 103 db y hay mas marcas, y aumenta el Ohmiaje a 16 ohmios o varios de 16 ohmios para sumar 46 ohmios por ejemplo con tres de 16 ohmios en serie.

  • @odindimartino597
    @odindimartino597 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    You should try the 6С19П triode. It can pass a lot of current for it's heating. I tried to do a OTL with two of these in a SRPP configuration, a coupling capacitor and serial connected speakers. It kind of worked

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Whoa, I hadn't heard of the 6С19П triode before, but you're right, that thing can move some serious current! My next plan was to actually use a bunch of 6146s triode strapped because even at 50V they can move something like 70mA (more than double the 12B4A).
      OTL is super interesting because it definitely requires a shift in thinking just to even get some sound out of it!

    • @Bleats_Sinodai
      @Bleats_Sinodai 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Whoa! That makes me wanna try using that little bugger with a 100R speaker I got recently...

  • @Yoh98
    @Yoh98 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I think you should try white cathode follower (WCF) next time. And I recommend you not to quit from output transformers, they can be funny part of designing tube amp, espesialy when you use tetrode or beam-tetrode/pentode where you cen make many diffrent circuit like ultra-linear or super pentode or even unity coupled like in McIntosh apms. 😉

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Ooh, the white cathode follower is very, very cool! I'll definitely have to experiment with that one next time!
      I wouldn't say that I have given up on output transformers, they're definitely the right way to do it, but I've got the OTL bug now, I totally want to build a properly wicked OTL amplifier!

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 19 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@UsagiElectricjajaja pues para ello añade un otl en puente cerrado de 4 o bucle, parece ser que cuadriplica potencia o aún mas, aunque supongo se necesitan varias fuentes de sumimistro de tensión para ello. 🎉😮

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You built a V8 racket machine. Congrats! Keep up the cool engineering work :)
    And I agree that this amp could use ceramic tube bases, possibly on a chassis rather than PCB.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you Keri!
      It means a ton to hear encouraging words from you after seeing your phenomenal amp projects!
      Ceramic bases and a bit more space between the tubes would have made a massive difference. For the next OTL I build, I think we'll throw space restraints out and just let the amp get big!

  • @pd1jdw630
    @pd1jdw630 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Ah no one two be for a is just fine. 👌🏻 we’ll understand.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you!
      Honestly, it's kind of become a running joke among friends now, we find it quite funny!

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin
    @GodmanchesterGoblin 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great! I love OTLs as a concept - they are the peak of inefficiency in tube audio (of course), but with a simplistic charm of their own.
    Not critical here, but it's generally considered bad practice to bias a tube from the wiper on a pot. The reasoning is that the connection could become noisy or intermittent over time which would clearly upset the DC bias conditions and act as a noise source. A simple solution is to add a single resistor from the wiper / grid to ground. This could be 1M, or even as much as 4.7M or so. The grid input current is extremely low, so a high resistor value will not affect the DC conditions, and will also allow a high value pot, permitting a high input impedance to the stage if needed.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thank you!
      It's a completely improper use of vacuum tubes for audio, but I think that's why I find it so fascinating!
      Thank you for the information on the additional resistor from the grid to ground. I never thought about the potentiometer potentially causing biasing issues, I'll definitely slip that in on future audio builds!

  • @tomcarlson3913
    @tomcarlson3913 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Back around 2014 while in college I built my own 4 channel OTL surround sound amp and used +/- 60V rails for the output (needed -120V output bias and something like 350V for the input gain stages). With 4 6AS7 outputs per channel (8 in stereo mode) it's plenty loud for a moderate sized room on quadraphonic mode, and rattle the windows and walls loud in stereo. It's clearer than conventional tube and SS amps too...It's really interesting to hear a tube amp deliver razor sharp synth from prog rock while at the same time being able to render crisp punchy DEEP bass from say an action film with gun shots and explosions, and get things like piano and vibraphone right to a surprising level of realism.
    You should try collecting vacuum tube TVs from the 60's. Once you get used to working with and surviving regularly getting shocked by 25KV, voltages over 60V stop being scary, and become pains that you learn to avoid touching.

  • @GORF_EMPIRE
    @GORF_EMPIRE 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The proper output transformer is going to match your impedance where you will get a very flat response and the warmth and bottom end will increase greatly. But that litle speaker is not going to demonstrate that as well as a bigger driver will.

    • @TheRamsberg
      @TheRamsberg 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yep, you said it.

  • @quagmire94
    @quagmire94 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    i bet if you used something different then those 1 watt speakers , it would sound Much better.

  • @paulstubbs7678
    @paulstubbs7678 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    An interesting hack amp, would be good to see two banks of output tubes, for push-pull, without running DC through the speaker.

  • @ashraf9472
    @ashraf9472 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    الله ينور عليك يا هندسة

  • @tinkerer570
    @tinkerer570 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    What a cool journey through non-conventional tube amp design! Just today I was studying cathode - followers for guitar amps and it is so cool to see them drive a speaker directly!
    Thank you for such a wonderful content!

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you so much!
      It's interesting how many different ways there are to tackle tube amplifier design! OTL amps really appeal to me, so this definitely won't be the last one I build. There's a ton of place I can improve on the design and get even better sound out of it. Plus, I have a handful of 6146 Power tubes that when triode strapped should be able to move about three times as much current as the 12B4A, which should be pretty exciting!

  • @Pipsqueakband
    @Pipsqueakband 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Your construction techniques are one of my favorite parts of your videos, always so clever and resourceful. Mounting the pots that way with the header pins is a great idea to take the stress off the joints.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you so much!
      I actually really struggled with a good way to mount the potentiometers using a single sided board. I discovered that If I give the header pins a slight bend, they slip right into the pot connection holes on the back side making it super easy to solder up, but also adding some strength to the mounting.
      I'm really happy with how this one turned out visually, it's a bit dense and runs way too hot, but it looks awesome!

  • @pn132
    @pn132 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm curious of the output transformers in the original amplifier were a large part of the issues you encountered. They remind me of the tiny transformers used in early transistor applications (while the engineers versed in vacuum tubes were making the transitions to transistors). Relatively small number of windings. Small core size. Small flux density. This worked well for the voltages involved in transistor applications. The limitations might explain why the bass falls flat, etc. Your extremely low plate voltages seem to change several variables though. I have a bunch of 48v telecom rectifiers on-hand... I might have to give this all a try. 🙂

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You're probably absolutely right! They were mystery transformers I bought on eBay years ago, so I have no idea what the winding ratio or even what they were originally designed for. Though, I'm fairly confident they weren't designed to take low voltage vacuum tube output, haha.
      "Low voltage vacuum tube audio amplifier output transformer" is an interesting field that I think might need a bit more research!

  • @boydmcree9085
    @boydmcree9085 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    absolutely one, two, victor seven. let them squirm in the floor and rithe in anger, you be you keep up the amazing work. I am mad TH-cam didn't recommend your channel sooner.

  • @tstahlfsu
    @tstahlfsu 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You do you! Read it off however you'd like!

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you!
      Mostly though, filming that section was a lot of fun, haha.

  • @Bishka100
    @Bishka100 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I forgot to mention that you could also try using two amps or at least two output stages in antiphase, wires across the speaker to double the voltage swing (which will double the currant), this should give you an extra 6db or so.
    And you forgot to ADD the toast rack 🙂

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I actually did initially try building a push pull type amplifier with driver triodes before and after the speaker to get a full range voltage swing out of it, but it absolutely refused to work. It made some sound, but it was extremely faint and distorted beyond belief. That was when I said "Just go as simple as you can idiot" and fell back on the design here, which worked surprisingly well!
      Aside form the heat that is, then again, not many toasters also play music!

  • @fmk326
    @fmk326 16 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Bueno ahora lo siguiente es el reto del "Amplificador Mágnético" para Audio, claro 😊
    que es a la inversa un amplificador solo con magnetismo y saturación de nucleo, bobinados y componentes discretos, sin válvulas, ni transistores, ni circuítos integrados, eso si que es un reto.
    Y se construyó en la II gran guerra, luego en emisión de radio transoceánica por Alexanderson, luego por Lundhal en los 90, y alguno mas hace dos años, pero no hay mucha info para Audio o pocos esquemas fijados al completo.
    Mag Amp, eso es lo siguiente, si te está pasando lo que a mi, mucha curiosidad 😂😂😂😂

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Did make a mosfet class A amplifier a few years ago, used a few parallel mosfets, and an iron core transformer to provide the DC removal for the speaker. Could adjust the bias to go from full class A, and a really hot set of mosfets to something like AB, where at least the current was under 1A per transistor. Heatsinks were old Pentium CPU coolers, one per transistor, and an old mains transformer with 12-0-12VAC secondary, with primary disconnected. Loud on 12V.

    • @akkudakkupl
      @akkudakkupl 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I have two push pull amplifiers built with fets and power transformers that are literaly 2x115V to 36V. Fun to build, guital sounds great through them.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's awesome!
      I love the idea of using old CPU coolers are heat sinks for the mosfets too, that's brilliant because those can often be found for cheap or free, and if you get really desperate, they already have provisions for cooling fans on them!

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric I did use the fans, just connected in series so they would be quieter, running all of 12VDC.

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric I have used them a lot for power supplies, as you can easily mount a few TO220 or TO247 power devices onto them with no problem, just drill and tap the M2 holes for the hardware to mount them. Some with no insulation, because the heatsink was easier to mount on isolating bushes, and I have done a number of LED lamps using the round CPU heatsinks, they are really good for that to mount a star PCB on. For that easiest is to use 2 part metal loaded epoxy, you can use the thermal stuff, but for me just the regular Pratley quickset steel worked well.

  • @Dr3x0w
    @Dr3x0w 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    4-125 tubes are rated for ~300 ma. You should try one of those. ;) I like your work! Great project! Greetings from Austria.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oooh, the 4-125 is a beefy tube! I love the idea of using transmitter tubes for completely different jobs.
      I actually have some 6146 beam power tubes that should dump out about 100mA at 50V when triode strapped, which is like triple what the 12B4A is rated for, so I would love to build another OTL with six or eight of those pushing enough power through a big speaker to rattle the windows!
      Thanks again and hello to Austria from Texas!

    • @Dr3x0w
      @Dr3x0w 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric I've commented a while ago that you could use a led voltage drop for negative grid bias. I've tested this in a circuit with a pl805 tube @170V. A power led between the tube and ground is enough to raise the cathode ~ 10v above ground level. This should work with direct heated tubes too. Just make sure the led get enough cooling :D

  • @matejkadlec2110
    @matejkadlec2110 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This may be a clever idea and nice design, but it's ruined by that crappy speaker.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The speaker surprisingly puts out a whole lot of decent quality sound! True, it's not going to rattle any windows, but I would say it sounds better than some of the cheapo bluetooth speakers you can get out there.
      You gotta remember that by the time you hear it, the audio has been through hell and back. The original recording was compressed down into an MP3, then played through my cellphone's audio player, which was then amplified and output by my OTL and speaker. Then it finds its way into my audio recorder microphone, where it gets compressed into MP3 format yet again, then it gets pulled into Davinci Resolve which compresses it again with its own algorithm when rendering the video. Then I transcode that video using Handbrake (which, you guessed it, compresses the audio yet again). Finally, I upload the transcoded video to TH-cam, who then does all sorts of mystery stuff to the audio before its streamed around the world to your computer/cellphone/TV, which processes the audio uses its own internal hardware and plays it back through unknown speakers.
      Honestly, it's a miracle it's even understandable!

  • @somepunkinthecomments471
    @somepunkinthecomments471 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I wonder if you could get good results from 3 12bh7 tubes, or even 2 6360 tubes. I'd love to see what you come up with when trying to scale the size of this down. I've been dreaming of making an opt guitar amp and this design seems like it could be a great start. Hell, I bet you could easily turn this into a great headphone amp too.

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 18 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Bien, muy bien, si quieres orientar esto a un amplificador de guitarra quizás yo pueda modestamente aportar algo.
      Tengo funcionando 2 o 3 para guitarra claro, en baja tensión y al menos otros dos con la tipología del circuito de Philips con 2 el86, pero yo te recomiendo que lo hagas de Baja tensión sobre los 30 o 50 voltios de circuito.
      Yo he utilizado la válvula 12k5 de doble impulso, específica para esos 40voltios , quizás se pudiera forzar mas.
      No da excesiva potencia, pero con un previo de dos válvular tipo ecc83 y un altavoz eficiente de guitarra, suficiente para un sonido de mucha calidad.
      Y por añadido tendras el mejor ampli de cascos con unos cascos de Alta impedancia de 200 o 600 ohmios.
      Yo incluso los he conducido con solo medio triodo en un previo tipo fender, sin control de tono , solo volumen y listo, y de esta forma traga pedales de guitarra de forma maravillosa,
      Es un sobido limpio y saturas con pedales.
      He montado uno con bateria de 12 voltios pequeña tipo alarma y dura mas de 15 horas y tambien a 220v conmutable claro. Y para guitarra
      Preguntame lo que necesites 😊

  • @dungareesareforfools
    @dungareesareforfools 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is quickly becoming my favourite channel!

  • @Soundbrigade
    @Soundbrigade 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are into cool stuff. I had a ton of 12B4’s 10 years ago to build a HV OTL amp but never did.
    If going for tough stuff you can use the 12B4 in a simple amp that is powered by a HV SMPS supplying some 170-200V. Or if going minimalistic, use a 6AS7G (or better still a 5998A) which is a dual power triode and a 12AT7 or similar for a 2-tube stereo amp.
    Requires beefier psu and output transformer but is an absolute killer.

  • @duality4y
    @duality4y 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I love this so much :) ha! makes me smile! especially when the volume went up :D

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you so much!
      It turned out better than I could have hoped!
      It puts out a ton of volume and still sounds excellent!

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect ปีที่แล้ว

    Oh I don't know about getting rid of the output transformers.... Just speaking aesthetically.... you need output transformers to give it a "proper yesteryear feel". But I suppose 6 driver tubes is more tubes, so that's "old-timey" too. And it's certainly got some "go juice" in it!
    The whole thing with the filament voltage having to be a "correct number"... I wonder if that's why some people call logic ICs "seventy four L. S. twenty" where I'd always say "seven four L. S. two zero" (I'm dyslexic... that's kinda the same as talking to aircraft on a radio)

  • @jonathanwilson5466
    @jonathanwilson5466 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hi, How would I get training in low voltage tubes. and also, what difference would 12ax7 of 12ux7 tubes make?

  • @dennisyoung4631
    @dennisyoung4631 ปีที่แล้ว

    Numb(?) question - will tubes like 6bj6 and 6ak5 work “acceptably” at 48 volts, or perhaps a little more - perhaps as much as 72 volts?
    I got *tossed* by ~300 volts in my teens, (1 tube Amateur Radio transmitter) and I’m not fond of “high” voltages.

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great idea! I am also a fan of OTL amplifiers. Here are a few suggestions:
    (1) That tiny speaker has two er, three fatal flaws regarding OTL: (1) It is probably very low efficiency and of course (2) Very poor bass response. You might want to try something like an old 1960's large speaker, those were many times more efficient and therefore louder and less distorty at reasonable volume levels. (2) Put the speaker in a sealed box, that will greatly improve the bass. (3) Put an 8 ohm resistor or a 1 Henry choke from cathodes to ground and couple the speaker through a 470uF capacitor, that will allow the speaker to run centered and perhaps less distorty.
    (2) There is a huge impedance mismatch between the tubes and the speaker. Maybe look around for a 40 ohm voice coil speaker? Or put a transformer between cathodes and ground? Adequate choices might be a wall-wart 120V to 6V transformer. You will likely get like TEN TIMES the power to the speaker. I know this shivs the OTL principle, but it really isn't an "output transformer" per se and you will get TONS more output!!!!
    (3) Another work-around is to use a PA speaker, those come with included "70.7V" transformers riveted on, and that will be a much better impedance match to your tubes. True, there still is an "OT", but you didn't design it in! Fudgy, but so much louder.
    For comparison I made an OTL amplifier using two 6080 tubes. Without an OT I only got about 300 milliwatts, very weak. With an old Tektronix power transformer as OT I got 4 watts, quite enough for an efficient speaker to blast out adequate sound.
    Regards and great respects!
    -- George

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you!
      And thank you for the excellent suggestions!
      The speaker is definitely ill-suited for this application, but it was what I had on hand. The wood box made a huge difference to base response though and both volume and range nearly doubled when I put the speaker in place.
      I also did try to put a few different coupling caps in series when testing the design to remove any DC through the coil, but no matter what size cap I tried, it always decimated the sound. Like removed greater than 90% of volume. It could be that I just didn't get a large enough capacitor, but I think it mostly had to do with weird impedance mismatching and the insanely low voltages I'm running at.
      Which is what you mentioned next! The speaker is an 8 ohm speaker, and I think the 6x 12B4As in parallel have an impedance of around 200 ohms, which is just way too much. Keeping with the concept of pure OTL, I have a few ideas. Another commenter suggested using the White Cathode Follower design, which looks really promising, but I have to do a lot more reading to figure out what the output impedance would be using that design. Also, I happen to have 14x 6146s hanging about that I'm not doing anything with. Even as a standard cathode follower, the 14 of them in parallel would bring output impedance down to like 50 ohms, which with some speakers in series perhaps could get the impedance very close indeed!
      I know an output transformer is the right way to do it, and if I were building an amplifier to actually have a nice sounding amp to listen to, that is what I would do. But, I already happen to have a Magnavox Concert Grand from 1962 that has two 40W amplifiers using a cadre of 6V6s and sounds absolutely sublime! So, this OTL shenanigans is purely a learning exercise to see just what all I can accomplish with some brute force ideas!

    • @georgegonzalez2476
      @georgegonzalez2476 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric The choke to ground and 470uF capacitor to speaker *should* have worked. Maybe you used too small a capacitor? The 6146 tube, if you look at its plate curves, is not very peppy at low plate voltages and has a high plate resistance, so it's not going to be a great match to an 8 ohm speaker. You could use 16 of them in parallel, then the heaters could be run off 120 VAC, and the plates off a half-wave or voltage doubler, so you could eliminate the power transformer too!!. Be careful though to keep the cathodes going to the white wire (neutral) side of the AC power. A better choice would be some tubes designed for lower plate voltage, like the classic 6AS7 or its military brother the 6080 or the pepped-up 6336. Somewhere in my attic I have a case of 6080's and a brass chassis, for a long-delayed 20-tube OTL. Keep up the good work!

    • @georgegonzalez2476
      @georgegonzalez2476 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh another little detail-- it looks like the tubes are running at zero or just grid-leak bias-- that's kinda iffy for audio. It might sound better with like -9 volts bias on the grids from a 9-volt battery through a 1Meg resistor. That will center the tubes a bit better into their operating range. Grid-leak bias is more for Class C operation or for tubes designed for zero bias. Regards!

  • @byterock
    @byterock 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Funny you are going full circle. Starting in aviation and ending up in aviation. OTL was one way they cut down on size on early light aircraft radios. One schematic I have handy uses two triodes for the output stage. Of course you need a set of crystal earphones to use with them but the same effect. Might I suggest a by-pass cap on our output to cut down on the tinny sound. .001 uf. As well you might want to use self bias vs cathode for the first stage you will get better gain. Pardon the sacrilege the 'Champ' was not a good design to start with ;)

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      That's actually really awesome, I had no idea that they would use OTL in aircraft radios to cut down on size. That makes a ton of sense though because space is at an absolute premium in a cockpit.
      I actually did try a couple by-pass caps on the driver tube output into the speaker coil to cut down on DC bias across the speaker, but the impedance mismatching is so ferociously bad, it didn't work at all. I'll have to give the whole design a proper rethink.
      And while the Champ Amp may not be a very good design, boy it sure is simple, haha!

    • @byterock
      @byterock 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric Yeah impedance matching is a real key to any out-put stage. That is why they put 'Transconduntance' on data sheets. Of course that is only matching to an output transformer but I wonder if you could use in in a formula for a direct couple to a speaker. Have a nice time trying to find a speaker other than 4 or 8. There are 3.2 out there but few an far between. You might come up with something like 6.68 or alike ;)

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 19 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Mejor aún busca un altavoz de 800 ohmios, 600 ohmios o 200 ohmios que es tu caso, con eso te puedes ahorrar hasta 2 válvulas de salida😊,
      También tienes altavoces de 16 o mas, y ya sabes puedes ponerlos en serie.
      También hay cascos de 600 o 200 ohmios de estudio de Senheiser o Akay, muy recomendables, ya los tengo y van muy bien, y te sorprendería comprobar como rinden hasta en graves los philips de tan solo 6", rinden como los de 12" de 8 ohmios, espectacular.
      Yo he tenido en altavoces de 800 y 600 ohmios salida directa incluso sin acoplar por condensador, y aunque la C.C. mejor evitarla no has muerto con envío de 5 a 10 voltios, en el banco de pruebas se puede llevar al altavoz hasta los límites para verificar situaciones y funcionamiento.
      Nunca se me han estropeado altavoces de 800 o 600 ohmios, y los de Philips me encantan.
      Ojo que también he conducido altavoces normales, pero necesitas mas en serie , aunque incluso uno de 16 ohmios y 103 db trabaja pero no sacas todo el rendimiento al amplificador que puede dar.

  • @Daft_Dhwelk
    @Daft_Dhwelk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I just learnt about how tubes work 2 days ago and now I'm hooked. I want to make a tube preamp for a gainclone lm3886 amp. What do you think, I go with the 12AX7?

  • @senilyDeluxe
    @senilyDeluxe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    While we're nitpicking about things that aren't a problem, you're still pronouncing "quite" like "quiet".

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I don't have a good excuse for that one, haha.

  • @mikelt2344
    @mikelt2344 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi, wonderfull and I would like to build a replica myself. However I am a complete beginner. Can you please give me hint how to connect the tubes. What I see is that they have 9 pins but in your schematics there are only 3 pins connected? Shurely I missed some background on tubes ..... Can you please give me some support.

  • @Colaholiker
    @Colaholiker ปีที่แล้ว

    Regarding your tangent on how you pronounced the tube name - how some people act in TH-cam comments is beyond me. Sure, if somebody is presenting factually incorrect information in a video, I can see why people would want to correct it. But just for a different, yet still technically correct way of saying it? Unbelievable. I did notice in earlier videos that you also like to say resistor values differently from what I am used to - but who cares if someone says twenty-two thousand instead of the more common twenty-two k(ilo). After all both means the exact same thing! No reason for me to bring that up pointing my finger at you and publicly try to make you look like a fool (while making myself look like one 😅).
    In fact, I am used to people pronouncing digits individually when it is not about the actual number as an amount (one hundred bucks are still one hundred bucks, but part number 357 is three-five-seven), probably because my late dad did it the same way, he used to work as a ground controller at one of Europe's largest airports, which was likely the reason for him doing that.
    To this day, I totally lose track when someone tells me their phone number in any way other than digit by digit. if it is 123456, it is one-two-three and so on, not twelve, thirty-four...to make matters worse, my native language of German loves to switch the order of ones and tens, so it is actually "four-and-thirty", making it even harder to type it in the correct order. 🤯
    Anyway, long story short, your content is awesome and I really want to thank you for it!
    Greetings from Germany!

  • @Peter_S_
    @Peter_S_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Always follow the rules. I before E, except when your foreign neighbor Keith receives eight counterfeit beige sleighs from feisty caffeinated weightlifters.

  • @GORF_EMPIRE
    @GORF_EMPIRE 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The first two are not always the heater volts.... anyone who REALLY knows tubes knows it's not always the case and should not be giving you crap for it. Some people just love to hear themselves sound smart.

  • @Pootycat8359
    @Pootycat8359 ปีที่แล้ว

    With that circuit, the only grid bias you're getting is from the current through the speaker! So the operating point is in a very nonlinear portion of the curve. If you were to put a DC voltmeter across any of those 1K resistors, I'm sure you'll find that the tubes are drawing grid current. You DON'T want THAT, in a Class A amp!

  • @stanpaddock3251
    @stanpaddock3251 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I enjoy your computer stuff but this low voltage no transformer audio amplifier is super cool.
    Why would anybody build such a good looking vacuum tube low voltage amplifier?
    Because you can.
    Stan Paddock

  • @PeetHobby
    @PeetHobby ปีที่แล้ว

    Why guessing the cap values, they are just simple high pass RC filters, they are not hard to calculate, there are also many online RC filter calculators so don't even need to calculate it by hand.
    Edit: If you think inrush current will be a problem a simple soft start circuit with mosfet or so hidden under the pcb would be a nicer and safer solution than two power switches, you maybe forget it one day and blow up a power supply or so.

  • @jonathanwilson5466
    @jonathanwilson5466 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    You are very modest while being very brilliant. I don't know who was foolish enough to call you a fool....

  • @maker-matt
    @maker-matt 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Please say "twelve" not "one" "Two". I appreciate your aviation background but this is tube jargon. Please don't use aviation nomenclature in conjunction with these few exceptions to the standard convention as justification.
    All that said, as an old timer electronic tech that has designed and built traditional high voltage tube (valve) pre-amps and amps , I do appreciate the innovation and entertainment value of your videos as the inspiration to pursue audio excellence!

  • @wramrobertodecamargoaccors4679
    @wramrobertodecamargoaccors4679 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As much as I enjoy OTLs, output transformers are not the villains that you suppose them to be. Being made up of inductor sections, transformers can and do increase signals dynamic behavior. In fact, they are a fundamental tool in that they allow us to shape the final timbre the amp is going to present. People wrongly believe the more straightforward a circuit is, the better. But this is not always true.Sometimes a more complex circuit carrying transformers means more harmonic richness, which is a good thing in musical terms. And let us not forget that harmonic richness is that which musicians are looking for whenever they overdrive their guitar tube amps!

  • @johnkemas7344
    @johnkemas7344 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The cell phone is a bad choice for a driving audio source. Too much distortion.My cell phone is actually annoying to listen to music on. Use a CD payer or other higher quality audio source. Small low cost speakers have poor audio reproduction characteristics. Then you'll know better what the true quality level can be Nice job, I stil prefer to use a transformer. I'm an old school tube guy! But hey go for it!!

  • @Pootycat8359
    @Pootycat8359 ปีที่แล้ว

    11:11 My God, that sounds horrible! The date on this video says, "1 year ago." Hmm...is this an "April Fool's Joke"?

  • @winstonsmith478
    @winstonsmith478 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Could you use the RightMark Audio Analyzer 6.4.5 to measure frequency response and distortion?

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I'm not sure how good it would be to test that as it would be limited by the speaker and microphone capabilities wouldn't it? As it is, I had to crank the recording volume on my Tascam recorder way down to prevent the microphone from clipping. I did check the distortion of the two amplifier stages on the scope though. This is a 1V P-P signal being input, and the output signal that goes to the grids of the driver tubes is 12V P-P and has surprisingly little distortion. It gets just a slight bit of distortion at the bottom of the sine wave, but other than that, it was way cleaner than I was expecting!
      i.postimg.cc/rw6pH9R3/IMAG0463.jpg

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The speaker is shunting the Cathode resistor, and needs decoupling with a large capacitor. You can also increase the value of that resistor to limit Anode current whilst giving a higher AC voltage across the speaker, and therefore more volume whilst improving output tube Cathode life.

  • @ivankirola2707
    @ivankirola2707 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Which tubes are used on the 2nd amp?

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      All the tubes on the OTL amplifier are 12B4A single triodes.
      For the older amplifier that we built a long time ago, I use 12BH7 dual triodes for amplification and 12B4As to drive the output transformer.

  • @extremelydangerous
    @extremelydangerous 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    just rewind a 2k ohms speaker coil in a 8inch speaker made in a repair shop... put it on a SPP push pull output stage using 300v ac and you will have a REAL sound...

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 16 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Jeje conoces a alguien que pueda rebobinar de esa foma?, Sería interesante

  • @peteb2
    @peteb2 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My tiny five cents worth... The Video kind of drives me nuts because it's not dealing with the way a vacuum tube works and the characteristics of this tube chosen so it operates in its designed-for range of voltages.... At least you should have pointed that out at the start plus that lousy quality speaker is not going to help the cause.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you for the feedback!
      I'm not sure if you're familiar with my other videos, but using tubes in situations that are massively out of their comfort zone is my whole thing! I have an entire vacuum tube computer that I'm building that only runs at +24V and -12V, which is ludicrously low voltage for tubes.
      I really love the idea of using tubes in really strange setups and situations, and pushing the boundaries of what tubes are capable of.
      As for the speaker, you gotta remember that by the time you hear it, the audio has been through hell and back. The original recording was compressed down into an MP3, then played through my cellphone's audio player, which was then amplified and output by my OTL and speaker. Then it finds its way into my audio recorder microphone, where it gets compressed into MP3 format yet again, then it gets pulled into Davinci Resolve which compresses it again with its own algorithm when rendering the video. Then I transcode that video using Handbrake (which, you guessed it, compresses the audio yet again). Finally, I upload the transcoded video to TH-cam, who then does all sorts of mystery stuff to the audio before its streamed around the world to your computer/cellphone/TV, which processes the audio uses its own internal hardware and plays it back through unknown speakers.
      In person it sounds much, much better than I can ever convey over video/TH-cam. Sure, it's not even 1/100 as good as my 1972 Magnavox Concert Grand, but if I'm not trying to build something that can compete with that (because nothing can, that's the best sounding audio system I've ever heard in my life). I'm just trying to have a little fun!

  • @softdorothy
    @softdorothy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Think I am happy with output transformers.
    Wood looks beautiful, tung oil is awesome. Gun stock oil is nice too.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Output transformers definitely make way more sense!
      But, there was just something super appealing about the idea of brute forcing sound through a speaker. I think it's because my simple brain just says "more toob is good," haha.
      The tung oil made such a massive difference with the wood, I was blown away with how nice it came out. I never thought of using gun oil though, that's a brilliant idea!

  • @SuperFredAZ
    @SuperFredAZ ปีที่แล้ว

    sounds pretty awful to me! as far as power, perhaps you are getting 1/2 a watt, you want OTL, use transistors, better yet buy a pre-made module!!!!

  • @tonymckay6556
    @tonymckay6556 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    the real challenge is building a pure dht amp.(driver and output tubes are DHT.) if you can do that without hum you will be the best.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Oooh, I don't know if I have any directly heated triodes hanging around to test that out with.
      Most directly tubes run at like 1V or 2V though, right? I suppose with big batteries on them you can get all the hum out, but that feels a bit like cheating, haha.

  • @feedbackelectronics
    @feedbackelectronics 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    ♥️💘💝👍💝💘♥️

  • @jonathanwilson5466
    @jonathanwilson5466 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I should be asking if a 12AX7 would work as the final driver tube?

  • @DavidWilliams-rn6uq
    @DavidWilliams-rn6uq 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Usagi, I don’t want to open a can of worms for you, but have you ever considered re-winding your speaker voice coils? Since there’s an impedance mid-match from the tube output to an 8 ohm speaker, then change the speaker to high impedance. Say, 1K?
    If I remember correctly, there was an ancient article in “Hi-Fi Magazine” about doing this, and they reported amazing response from the speakers when not running through an output transformer.

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Quizás no necesite rebobinar sus altavoces si encuentra uno de 800 ohmios o 600 ohmios por ejemplo en Ebay, no te preocupes si ves que es de tan solo 6" rinden como los de 12 hasta en sonidos graves dentro de una caja semiabierta, y suenan de maravilla.
      Es lo que yo he hecho y si, son unos grandiosos altavoces,
      Estaría bien encontrar ese artículo que comentas para hacerlo uno mismo en casa tambien, pero ojo la bobina lleva hilo mui fino, demasiadas espiras y ocupan tamaño, algunos diseños de philips y otros llevaban la bobina por delante del cartón a la vista exteriormente junto con el imán claro, si por delante del cono.

  • @RapperBC
    @RapperBC 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    DAMMIT, it's not ONE-TWO, it's TWEL-
    oh ok

    • @RapperBC
      @RapperBC 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      (seriously, though, this is fascinating stuff, and I thank you for this (8^D)

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@RapperBC Haha, gotcha!
      Thanks for the checking the videos out!

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    In German, the hundreds, ones and then the tens are usually mentioned.
    But when I'm alone, I say the numbers number by number: hundreds, tens, ones.
    In English, only the numbers up to nine-teen are twisted. So teen-nine, than twenty-one.

  • @stamasd8500
    @stamasd8500 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The 0A2 is without a doubt a zero-volt hater... because it's a cold-cathode tube, it doesn't have a heater. :)

  • @rinokentie8653
    @rinokentie8653 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Really enjoyed watching this.

  • @menotyou8369
    @menotyou8369 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Unless I'm having a stroke, putting 4 speakers in series should give you four times the volume.

  • @peteleoni9665
    @peteleoni9665 ปีที่แล้ว

    Makes me nervous just to hit play. Rules? What rules? Ohm law? Ohms schemes. (-"

  • @pietpraters1770
    @pietpraters1770 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    lol why do your tubes in your schematics look like a sad robocop with a handlebar mustache dang it what is seen can never be unseen XD

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hahaha, I never noticed that before! That's just how the models in TINA look, but man, now that's all I'm ever going to see!

  • @woodydailey4687
    @woodydailey4687 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Recently a famous audio engineer playing with some rather expensive speakers found that letting a 100 ma or so dc curent actualy lowered the speaker distortion by up to 50%. !

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Lo que puede parecer que sea malo, puede no serlo tanto cuando se aprende como manejarlo, en los OTL y en los altavoces de alta impedancia hay mucha informacion ( mitos) sin contrastar, mitos populares de la antigüedad, infundados claro, y casi todos perniciosos que curioso.😊

  • @Pulverrostmannen
    @Pulverrostmannen 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    As many pointed out is the DC you get through the speaker in this design an issue that will affect the sound and generate a fair amount of heat in the voice coil. But it is a fun project anyway. I would probably gotten for a big capacitor in series with the speaker and then match the resistor in parallell with that for decoupling but I know some gonna say a choke is better but that depends how much bias you wanna have the tube at. many would say just omit the resistor and put the choke there instead but you also gonna remove any bias of the tube and this design is cathode biased which gonna need that resistor to work, the same thing is actually happening with that low resistance speaker across it anyway so there will be barely no bias at all which might as well be a good things at a low voltage. but in a way you still wanna have the parallell capacitor on the resistor to increase gain and if you put the speaker in series with this you actually gonna get sound out of it as signal passes by but no DC. however I could go on forever what pros and cons you gonna have with each solution but the golden rule is still to test them and see how they really do. you already play the tubes at lower voltage than they want and it gonna change everything in the end so one solution may still not be correct even if it should be. experiments is what gives the progress of things.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you for all the excellent information!
      And you're totally right, because I'm operating in such a weird region for the tubes, experimentation is really the only way to figure out what still sounds good.
      For the next OTL I build, I definitely want o work on getting the DC bias out of the speaker, so I'll definitely give these ideas a shot! I'm planning on using a handful of 6146 tubes triode strapped to move about twice as much current as the 12B4A here per tube. Granted, those need more than twice the filament current, so I suppose that's not unexpected, haha. It'll be interesting to see how they sound through a properly sized speaker, even if we're still at a really low voltage.

    • @Pulverrostmannen
      @Pulverrostmannen 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric no problem. I am happy to help and it is very fun to watch someone learning tubes like you do too. It is a great kind of learning. If you are interested you could get my discord if you want some help with anything :)

  • @yjbmwsc
    @yjbmwsc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In theory, having a few loudspeakers hooked up in series can pull up the impedance to better match the output impedance of the valve output stage...

    • @W1RMD
      @W1RMD 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I'll have to try that. Thanks!

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 18 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Y en la práctica,

  • @rainrikas3399
    @rainrikas3399 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It helps to more adequate judgement of voice quality, if spoken through also the qualities of loudspeakers, a resonance frequency meaning related to them and how this affects the imaging of soundtrack played.
    Mind, with original amp, with transformer output, You used really teeny-tiny speakers, which likely cut the frequencies heavily already from 500Hz downwards. The OTL however, I'd guess, had a speaker load with a resonance frequency nearer to 200 Hz and therefore also allowing better image of base.
    Try them both amps with a very simple card cone 6 to 8 inch full range speaker and the improvement will be immediate, despite the lowest price of the speaker.
    Also, you are handy (respect ) on woodwork, like it shows. This could lead to another exploration, related to word couple - Open Baffle.
    Keep up. Love your thinking and deeds. ;)

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You're definitely right, it wasn't really a fair comparison of the two because the speakers were pretty dramatically different between them. I do really want to build another amp with a proper output transformer and speaker to see how good of sound I can get out of something compact. I have an idea of building a tube amp that sits on top of a wooden cylindrical speaker box with the speaker mounted on the bottom facing downwards. I think that could result in a really beautiful design with some work and it sounds like the perfect candidate for a proper output transformer amp!

    • @rainrikas3399
      @rainrikas3399 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric Oh... I am far from being ultimately right here. Didn't touch the issue with tiny output trannies. Small as these, they do limit the frequency delivery also. Neverthless, especially in guitar amp making, is not so critical always. Also, the whole side kick science, not recognized/accepted with true proud audiophools, goes about using power supply transformers for output. And these go for fraction of price compared to specialized output transformers. Can have lots of fun cutting/bending the corners in this area. ;)

  • @eugenepohjola258
    @eugenepohjola258 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Howdy. Nice.
    I like Your persistence of vision and thinking outside the box. Makes me want to try using the beasts KT88, 6V6 or 6L6.
    Regards.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you!
      I really love experimenting with tubes in way that not many others have before. I learn a ton about how the tubes react in weird situations, which gives me a lot of fun ideas about what to try next!

    • @eugenepohjola258
      @eugenepohjola258 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric Howdy. Yeah.
      I'm with You. The DC through the speaker is problematic.
      One idea is to use a really large inductor at the cathode to pass the DC and divert the AC through a large el. cap. to the speaker. With an 8 ohm speaker the inductor needs to be about 30 H for a transition frequency of 40 Hz. An enormous chunk of iron.
      If solid state components are tolerated one may use a constant current cathode load instead. That would be feasable.
      Or one could design a SRPP (Series Regulated Push Pull) output stage.
      Regards.

  • @andygozzo72
    @andygozzo72 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    philips came up with a transformerless output circuit using either 2 EL86/6CW5s, or a EL86(or UL84) and a EL84/6BQ5 , with a special 800ohm impedance speaker , capacitor coupled, unfortunately, as said in the video, it needed quite a high HT/B+ for 'good' output (one record player that used the circuit had a roughly 400v HT line!)

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 18 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Yo he construido varios OTL con esta topología de Philips y van realmente bien, con altavoces de 600 homios, pero tambien con altavoces en serie de 16 ohmios muy eficaces, y hasta con El 84 y EL 34, dan entre 5 a 10 watios. Recuerdo que en esta topología de philips solo entrega potencia una de las válvulas El86, etc, la otra es reguladora/estabilizadora del circuito
      aproximadamente, con un solo Triodos de previo, con mas previo supongo aumentará la ganancia.
      Philips estaba en la linea adecuada, que pena que lo descontinuaran 😅

  • @陽天-g8g
    @陽天-g8g 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    見たとたん、悪い音やとわかる。

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      このビデオで一番試したかったのは低電圧で動くかどうかだったので、動いてうれしかったです!

  • @mikelt2344
    @mikelt2344 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    OK, I build the "Amplifier" the 3 tube version. It works - however there is a lot of distortion in the music coming out of the speaker. And the signal directly feed into the speaker is louder than the signal coming from the "Amplifier". So somehow I agree it works but nothing more. It consumes 45 Watt and the signal is distorted and fainter meaning negativ ampification. 🤔I put the same components and followed 100% your schematic.
    ☹ Really sorry but - the "lets build a tube amplifier" was a flop, I don't know what you did but mine was even a double flop - flop flop so to say.

    • @christopherkarlon4463
      @christopherkarlon4463 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bro this is a class A model, the efficiency is low (20%) and with 3 tube you have to match the transformer and shit. The circuit is simple but valves are tricky on low voltage.
      Class A its know to be a pre-amp, and you need a power phase to increase the output current with beefy tubes to better results.

  • @yellow_noise3
    @yellow_noise3 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You have reversed order of input resistors. Instead of grid stoper you made voltage divider....

  • @TechTed1
    @TechTed1 ปีที่แล้ว

    You cant build a transformerless amplifier as time as you use a coil is in your speaker i sugest you to use a capacitive buzzer instead 😊

  • @josepheccles9341
    @josepheccles9341 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Feel free to speak it as you like.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you!
      It was actually just a lot of fun to film that section!

  • @zinckensteel
    @zinckensteel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You could use a series synthetic inductor to set the DC bias and tap off the audio with a large capacitor. A suitable "gyrator" circuit can be made from a single p-type FET.. ..which suggests that it could be done with a (suitably low impedance) tube as well.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's definitely a bit beyond my skill level!
      But, I do have some 6146s that are quite a bit lower impedance than the 12B4A, so I think for the next OTL journey will involve those big boys!

    • @zinckensteel
      @zinckensteel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric Consider using an inverted triode arrangement - plate at large negative bias becomes a control electrode with very little input capacitance, grid at positive bias becomes the output, cathode is handled as usual. The output impedance is much lower (nothing in the way of the electrons other than weak repulsion from the other side of the grid), at the expense of inverted voltage gain. However, the input still draws almost no current, so a tiny step-up signal transformer with a ratio similar to the "normal" gain of the tube can correct for this.

  • @Pootycat8359
    @Pootycat8359 ปีที่แล้ว

    And the fact that you retained the 100K resistor, in parallel with the speaker?

  • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
    @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The DC coupling definitely helps with the metal rock.
    The DC bias it puts on the speaker may or may not be making much of a difference. It depends on the capability of the speaker. Too much bias and it will bottom or top out the cone at the extremes of its travel well before it would do so without the bias. Using a choke in the vicinity of 1 henry (with the smallest resistance practical) as a direct load and connecting the speaker via a large capacitor in the vicinity of 1000 uF would eliminate the bias. The high value resistor from the cathodes to ground shouldn't make a difference at all given the low impedance of everything else.
    With powers this small "red plating" is not likely. Overstressing the tiny cathodes would be more likely.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you for the excellent info!
      I actually did try to put a few different caps in series when testing the design to remove any DC through the coil, but no matter what size cap I tried, it always decimated the sound. Like removed greater than 90% of volume. It could be that I just didn't get a large enough capacitor, but I think it mostly had to do with the insanely low voltages I'm running at.
      The 12B4A was moving around 40mA through each tube, which at 48V should mean an internal resistance of about 1200 ohms per tube. With six in parallel that should be something like 200 ohms of series resistance with the speaker.
      I think the impedance is just so ridiculously mismatched that adding a series capacitor just wrecked whatever weird balance I had going on here.
      Or I could be totally off the mark, this is all uncharted territory for me!

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric You'll need a sufficient DC load for the cathodes to get any beef from this amplifier from a capacitor isolated speaker if the speaker isn't the DC load (that 100K is a joke) That's why I suggested the choke. It's possible to get low resistance toroidal chokes today for ridiculous cheap prices. The choke will block AC, letting it be able to pass on all the better to the speaker.
      Mismatch is part of why you don't have the very best output possible. But it still should be possible to spare the speaker a DC bias.
      Remember the cathodes can pull (positive) but cannot push (negative). That's what a DC load is for.

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Need a bigger triode, perhaps a beam power tetrode running in triode mode, or one of the bugger transmitter tubes instead.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Absolutely!
      I happen to have about 14x 6146 power pentodes, which when triode strapped move well more than double the current as the 12B4A at a given voltage. I'm thinking a bunch of those in parallel would be quite quite exciting!

  • @skullheadwater9839
    @skullheadwater9839 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm kind of confused about why you want to build vacuum tube amplifiers but not with required voltage has to give any kind of reasonable performance. It's kind of like saying I'm going to build an 18-wheeler truck and I wanted to be able to haul loads to the grocery store from the factory and I'm going to use two ceiling fan motors mounted to the wheel hubs and power it with a 12-volt battery. Is it because you're just trying to see what you can do with low-voltage with high-voltage devices or is it that you don't want to make the investment and buying proper transformers? Because you can always do a series filament amplifier like an early radio. There are 35 volt rectifiers that matchup with 50 v power tubes and you can sop up the rest of the 120 v with other 12-volt tubes. I am posting this at the beginning of the video so maybe you are able to make a successful OTL amplifier with 48 v. I just can't imagine it having very much volume.

    • @bichela
      @bichela 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      His object was to use a low b+ to be safer for tinkering. I find it interesting.

  • @robot797
    @robot797 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I wish you were to use a bit of a higher voltage
    because I think it would preform even better and louder
    any new yet on the 555 kit?

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      A higher voltage would definitely give better performance and volume, but that defeats the purpose here, which is to see what we can accomplish at ridiculously low voltages. By that same logic, I should have built the vacuum tube computer at higher voltages, but I think what makes it (and this OTL amplifier) really unique and fun is that it's at super low voltages!
      Nothing new on the 555 kit yet, Chinese New Year slowed some things down and I've had a nightmare of a time figuring out a reliable way to produce the legs. I have some more ideas to try, but I gotta recover some money first.

    • @robot797
      @robot797 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric true true
      in that case
      could you try building a otl with pl95 tubes
      I have like 10-30 of those around and I kind of wanna use them for something

  • @Zabak74
    @Zabak74 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Vacuum Tube amplifier is one thing but important is to have a high quality DAC, suitable speakers and not to mention a quality sound source, ie some lossless format

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      If you're going for some proper, Hi-FI audio quality, you're absolutely right!
      Here, with a simple cell phone playing a compressed MP3 out of a tiny speaker, the audio quality was never going to be that great. But, if I'm being totally honest, I'm deaf in one ear so proper audio quality is often lost on me, so the main purpose of the build was to see what could be done at low voltage and as simplistic as possible!

    • @Zabak74
      @Zabak74 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric In that case, you did very well and I understand the reasons that led you to do so.
      Thanks and good luck ;-)

  • @_film_flashback
    @_film_flashback 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you're going to stand by that logic then you must also call it a "niner" and no longer a nine.

  • @andymouse
    @andymouse 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Cool, I would still like to see a frequency response and have a look at THD just for a laugh !...cheers.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I have no clue how to go about checking something like that, but I did actually test input vs. output of the amplifier stages on the scope!
      This is a 1V P-P signal being input, and the output signal that goes to the grids of the driver tubes is 12V P-P and has surprisingly little distortion. It gets just a slight bit of distortion at the bottom of the sine wave, but other than that, it was way cleaner than I was expecting!
      i.postimg.cc/rw6pH9R3/IMAG0463.jpg

    • @andymouse
      @andymouse 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric Thanks !

  • @va3dxv
    @va3dxv 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Different tubes have different naming conventions. Depends if it's named under RETMA, RMA, JAN, Mullard/Phillips, Eimac, EIA, etc... 4cx250 is an Eimac tube. In their convention 4 = Tetrode (3 for triode, 5 for pentode, etc). C = ceramic construction. X = external anode. 250 = 250w anode dissipation. Next letter indicates the variant (filament voltage, special use case, etc). A next number indicates amplification factor in the case of triodes. They also use a 4 digit EIA part number, and other manufacturers (RCA, etc) produced tubes identical to Eimac with this number.

  • @gordonwelcher9598
    @gordonwelcher9598 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I don't think the output tubes are getting much negative bias with only an 8 ohm speaker in the cathode circuit. What is the voltage from cathode to grid?

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The cathode followers should essentially just put the cathode at the same level as the grid voltage.
      However, with just an 8-ohm speaker, there's all sorts of horrific impedance mismatching going on. It's actually pretty surprising it sounds as good as it does.

    • @gordonwelcher9598
      @gordonwelcher9598 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric There is an impedance mismatch like most OTL amplifiers. Looking at the curves, the plate current is not too far off from proper class A operation. The curves are hard to read at only 48 volts. The negative feedback is good to reduce distortion but some audiophiles would say the sound is not as clear. I would like to know the cathode to grid voltage to study this further. Also could you measure the resistance of the speaker with an ohmmeter to help calculate the DC operating condition.

  • @Theineluctable_SOME_CANT
    @Theineluctable_SOME_CANT 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    What is your fascination with valves??!

  • @ropersonline
    @ropersonline 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Run, little bunny! Remember what they did to the bunny in DOOM!

  • @trevorvanbremen4718
    @trevorvanbremen4718 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hmmmm, I have a decent handful of pentode Mullard EL34 (that's 6CA7 to you fellas over the pond).
    I wonder how well they'd do as a parallel cathode follower final stage OTL 48V.
    The heaters on them are 1.5 Amp if my (aging) memory is correct so that'd be 56 Watts of heaters for a '6-pack'

  • @malcolmfairleigh1193
    @malcolmfairleigh1193 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    better to make the output stage push pull with zero dc offset across speaker

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I actually did initially try building a push pull type amplifier with driver triodes before and after the speaker to get a full range voltage swing out of it, but it absolutely refused to work. It made some sound, but it was extremely faint and distorted beyond belief. I also tried to run a big capacitor in series with the speaker, but the impedance mismatching is so ridiculous here that that totally failed to work too.
      In the end, this super simple (but compromised) design ended up working the best!

  • @countryhamop4580
    @countryhamop4580 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    12U7 would work better for the low level stages- they're designed for low voltages and have a bit higher u.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You're totally right, there's some excellent space charge tubes out there that give a lot of current at really low plate voltages!
      Unfortunately, they're a bit expensive and rare, I just so happened to have either of those 12B4As floating around, so I decided to give that a shot and was super happy with the results!

    • @countryhamop4580
      @countryhamop4580 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@UsagiElectric Expensive? Usually they're some of the cheapest ones, in my experience, since their applications were fairly limited. The 12U7 wasn't strictly a space charge type tube.

  • @neccron9956
    @neccron9956 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Look at headphone amplifiers for ideas on how to construct an OTL amp.
    This design will eventually fry the speaker, since you have the full output tubes (idle) current going through 8 ohms (100k across 8 ohms is 8 ohms) speaker, and speakers do not like DC across them.
    Pluss, the output tubes are cathode biased, but with only 8 ohms from the cathode to ground, they have near zero bias, so the tube are basically turned fully on.

  • @MrDwadi84
    @MrDwadi84 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very nice can you upload pcb design somewhere?

  • @AgentOrange96
    @AgentOrange96 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    BTW the first two digits are the filament voltage BTW

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Except for when they're not 😄

  • @Strike_Raid
    @Strike_Raid 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    If you put enough of them in parallel, I guess you could actually impedance match with a 16 ohm speaker. 4 16 ohm in series with 15 12B4 in parallel should match up pretty close.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yup, even two of the 8 ohm speakers in series would have made a massive difference, but I only had one of the speakers unfortunately. For the next OTL I build, I think I'm going to use big 6146 tubes triode strapped. At 50V, they should move about 60 to 70mA. I have 15 of those in my collection, so if I run 14 of them in parallel, that should get me to about 50 ohms of impedance, which with 6x 8 ohm speakers in series is just about perfect!
      (Granted, I'll need 100+W of power just for the filaments, haha)

    • @Strike_Raid
      @Strike_Raid 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric Match all your filament currents and put them all in series. If you get your tube count right, you many end up with enough that you can run the heaters off line voltage and you won't need an A supply at all.

    • @fmk326
      @fmk326 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@UsagiElectricsi considero que lo mejor es un termino medio y un equilibrio, para reducir algunos tubos aunque pongamos mas altavoces en serie., Y si es posible de alta eficiencia no se te olvide 😊

  • @skullheadwater9839
    @skullheadwater9839 ปีที่แล้ว

    Instead of trying to just parallel power stages try push pull

  • @frankowalker4662
    @frankowalker4662 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    That's awesome. It'll be short lived, but AWESOME!!! :)

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you!
      I'm curious how long it'll actually go for. I've got a few more amplifier projects I want to build, so once I get something much better going, I may stress test this little guy to see just how long it'll survive for.

    • @frankowalker4662
      @frankowalker4662 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UsagiElectric That should be fun. Ha ha.