- Jul 27, 2009
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could anyone help me out? i know what im doing with the pcb now but what is a safe value to set the bias too?
It depends on the tubes... Have you installed a bias pot, or are you switching a resistor to allow more range with the fixed bias in those.
18mA per tube is my favorite.
And if the OP didn't know, you should measure plate voltage from the OT primary (around 400-450 volts usually). Then measure resistance over both sides of the primary (from center tap to anode). Plate voltage / (OT resistance *2) = plate current per tube. Don't go over 0,7 * 30W / plate voltage.
Right guysgot that onboard thank you
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Now I've recently fancied putting a kt88 in position 1 and 4 what are people opinions on this and how could I go about that?
That's pretty cold. You could safely bias up to 40mA per tube (80mA per OT primary side). Plate voltage is around 450 volts, right? I did a bias mod on a friends 6505+, which sounded nice to me at around 35mA.
Thanks dude you've saves me some workanyone got any links on how to correctly measure the bias etc?
I would never bias at 40mA, nor would I at 35mA. High gain amplifiers start to sound mushy with the tubes running that hot, and say goodbye to your tubes since the percent plate dissipation is close to if not over 70% at that point. I've owned a lot of 5150s, and they sound better biased cold.
I would never bias at 40mA, nor would I at 35mA. High gain amplifiers start to sound mushy with the tubes running that hot, and say goodbye to your tubes since the percent plate dissipation is close to if not over 70% at that point. I've owned a lot of 5150s, and they sound better biased cold.
Its called a bias probe, get one.
Its all preference, I love my 5150 at 42mA (which is exactly at 70%). That additional sag makes the amp sound a bit more pissed off and compressed on the palm mutes which I absolutely love. I don't get what you mean by mushy though, as I have yet to experience that.
I maxed the bias pot in my 6505+ and it reach 35mA for tube. It sounds nice.
I did a 6505 vs 6505+ comparison 2 weeks ago and the 6505 was very very cold... with the post gain at 3 it had the same volume of mine at 2.
Are you sure it wasn't 35mA for the pair of tubes? I had to add a resistor to get even close to that on my friends 6505+.
That's your opinion - Personally, I think they sound leaps and bounds better biased at the correct voltage, cross-over distortion is gross. Mushy? If anything, my 5150 sounds much fuller, maybe that's what you mean by mushy? Amps with properly biased tubes (~70%) last years without a tube changes, I don't see how the 5150 would be any differentYou might as well not even install the bias mod then if you prefer the amp cold.
And the other 5000 engineers in the world who own stock 6505s, have no issues producing amazing tones with them off the shelf? Peavey has sold a billion of these amps, and with the stock lack of bias adjustment, it really hasn't been a significant issue. I've had 6505s modded, and heard several other modded 6505s belonging to other people, and in my honest, educated, and experienced opinion, just about nothing beats a stock 6505 with a good boost for delivering awesome metal tones.
This falls into the "if everyone else is doing it you should do it to" category, just because some people like one sound, doesn't mean its the end all say all. everyone is entitled to their opinion, I know of many people that bias mod their amps and still keep them relatively cold, it all comes down to what you like and if the mod is worth it.