Ever since I grafted a 6SN7 on the line stage section of my hacked Dyna PAS preamp, I've been hooked on the "octal sound." Could it be the higher heater current draw boiling more electrons and/or larger stature that give it a 3-D quality, richer tonal color, detail, dynamics + more, compared to their 9-pin/noval siblings?
Ideally, the 3850 ohm plate resistance of the two triode sections of a 6SN7 connected in parallel should drive a 12K primary Z. I considered getting a pair of Hammond 125BSE output transformers, which have the flexibility of reflecting back a 2.5K, 5K or 10K primary Z but I already had a pair of these 5.5K:4 ohm SE OPTs in my parts bin that I was sure would fit under the chassis.
!!!WARNING!!!
The voltages in this project are potentially lethal! Proceed at your own risk!
The circuit is a simple 2-stage cascade - 1 triode section of a 6CG7 functions as the input/driver stage R-C coupled to paralleled 6SN7 triode sections.
Square waves at 100Hz, 1 kHz and 10 kHz Top trace = audio generator Bottom trace = amplifier output |