Trans' or tubes, hmm i wonder...

Started by Somicide, December 18, 2003, 02:39:10 PM

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Somicide

I thought of this, as a method of generating a tube sound in a SS amp.  Now:

would it be possible to use tubes in lieu of transistors in a ckt (like the Big Muff, for example)?  I'd love to hear how that'd work, if possible, probably need some sort of massive proprietary pwr supply though or something.
Peace 'n Love

Ansil

i haven't tried the bigmuff but i used to have posted a tube ts9 and a tube guvnor

Jason Stout

Quotei haven't tried the bigmuff but i used to have posted a tube ts9 and a tube guvnor
Ansil
Did you make a tube opamp?
Jason Stout

Ansil

no i designed the  gain and freq to be similar as i could get to the previous described pedals.


i guess icould if you wanted me to design one.

although personally iwould use subminiature declassified military tubes. since you need so many

Somicide

then i'd just have to make a huuuge casing, with tube sockets.  ON another note, don't tubes have like 6, um, metal thingies (the term has escaped me) contacts or whatever, while transistors only have 3?  how would i work that?
Peace 'n Love

Brian Marshall

that is because each tube has 2 stages

plus it has to heat the filament.

I dont know a thing about tubes though.  From what i do under stand the opperate more like fets that bipolars

Jered

Here you go, tube op amps
http://www.triodeel.com/images/gaprk2w1.jpg
http://www.triodeel.com/images/gaprk2w2.jpg

  and if you scroll about 2/3 down this page you will see the whole George Philbrick Tube OP Amp manual.
http://www.angelfire.com/electronic/epeasant/circuits/circuits.html

 Enjoy,  Jered

Peter Snowberg

Quote from: Brian MarshallFrom what i do under stand the operate more like fets that bipolars
Tubes are voltage controlled devices and work like depletion mode JFETs, such as the 2N5457, J201, and MPF102. BJTs are current controlled devices.

You can use tubes at low voltages, but I don't know how they would respond. I've built a couple of distortions than ran from 12 volts, but that was to abuse the signal. :)

There was a whole family of low voltage tubes, but the B+ was generally maxed out at 60 to 90 volts.

Take care,
-Peter
Eschew paradigm obfuscation

Chill

I think the old Chandler/ BK Butler/ Tubeworks Real Tube Overdrive ran the tubes at 12V, although the schematic for that was a 4 knob and the ones I've seen are 5 knob.  The Real McTube, Matchless Hotbox, and Ibanez Tube King are three other tube effects which come to mind.

You could also take your basic Marshall JCM800 2 tube preamp and put it in a box, though you may need some fancy switching to keep your input and output away from each other...and you'll need to rectify and filter the mains to get a smooth ~240-300V for the supply.  Though it might work with a 120V supply with some parts value tweaking.  Less voltage = less headroom = more clipping.

And yep, 12ax7's have 9 pins, 1-2-3 and 6-7-8 are the two triodes, 4,5, and 9 are the filament pins.  Check out Aiken's Common Cathode design article for more on how to tweak the tube stages.[/url]

Elektrojänis

Quote from: JeredHere you go, tube op amps
http://www.triodeel.com/images/gaprk2w1.jpg
http://www.triodeel.com/images/gaprk2w2.jpg

That's freaky. How about that and some rectifier tubes (or whatever... I don't know anything about tubes) for diodes for TS or Rat or maybe Shaka Braddah clipping stage.

Ansil


Elektrojänis

Quote from: Ansili did a tube version of the ts9

Any sound clips?