About 20 years ago I had a great conversation with Gerald Weber on the phone. I came across an article he wrote in guitar player magazine on how to shorten wires in the preamp section of a twin reverb Plus I changed the amp from a silver face to an black face. He is a down the earth guy. He explains things in an essay to understand way. I have his book and vhs tape. Thank you Gerald c];-)
A question: I need help with interpretation of tube data sheets. In the RCA data book tubes are listed with operating conditions in 3 columns. Just beneath the descriptive paragraph the columns are titled. (use the 6V6 family as an example), 6V6 on the left, 6V6GT in the middle, & the GTA on the right. My confusion begins in the class A section of typical operating conditions, does each column describe conditions of the tube titled above, OR, is each column describing conditions from a single tube of the family, but with different plate voltages? If its the latter is seems to me that the tubes output resistance Changes depending on the plate voltage?
Gerald, could you re-do this vid again with the errors fixed on the actual video? Seems like a small thing and I know you fixed it with screen graphics but I think selling a course that is supposed to be the best, you ought to have it right the first time. Hope that makes sense.
There isn't any. Colleges think an amplifier is something whose output is exactly like the input but louder. A guitar amp must have the output sound better than the input and it must respond to a players picking nuance. In short, it is a musical instrument. Colleges don't have a clue about that.
@@abbierose8934 I already cover that in my online course. You can enroll HERE. www.kendrick-amplifiers.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=KOS&Product_Code=Tube_Amp_Correspondence_Course&Category_Code=
How would you know since you haven't done the course. The alumni think it is worth many times the tuition cost. But you wouldn't know because you have zero knowledge of the course.