811a SE Amplifier with a twist

Goodbye Jon

Sadly, yesterday heard the sad news that our friend Jon Finlayson from the London Audio Circle passed away.  Jon was an incredible person, a true music lover and passionate about life. He introduced me to most of the circle team members and enjoyed thoroughly the meeting at his place and listen to his electrostatic speakers and constantly evolving system.

I learnt such a great deal of stuff from him and will remember our conversations and how passionate and meticulous he was into doing things. In particular when I built my Starlight CD player and he helped me out with the DAC ladder resistor matching.

See you on the other side Jon.

The 811a amplifier

The last year of the pandemic allowed me to do some experiments whilst being more at home. I hooked up an 811a on the bench with the following circuit:

I reused my original D3a driver from the 300B SE Amplifier. That was an easy choice and speed up my building process. I added a PMOS driver for a “plate to grid” feedback. The feedback network was somehow tricky to trim as had limited resistors available but the combination of 2 39KΩ resistors and a 18KΩ resistor worked well. The follower helped with driving the positive grid current which is about 16mA on idle at 22.5V bias or so. The bias is actually adjusted with a positive regulator set to about 50V on the PMOS gate.

I ended up building a PCB for the PMOS driver, very simple but effective.  I used an SMPS for the filament supply and was good enough for testing purposes.

The iron was some Lundahl gapped at 90mA which I had at hand, but can be anything you want.

Power? Oh yes, could extract 16W at about 1.5% and think measured 18W before clipping.  Distortion at low power (e.g. 2W) was less than 0.4% so a nice beauty to listen to. I love the sound I got out of it, not my normal listening system and couldn’t move the whole Frankenstein down to where my speakers are with the kids around and 600V all over it (long are gone those days where 600V were everywhere in my music cabinet).

 

 

ETF.19 Starts

Mercury love from J. Jackson and D. Slagle’s mono system​
833a main system

The main system is made up of 833a choke loaded and parafeed output. The driver is a mu-follower made up of a 6N6P loaded with a D3a. Second stage is a 300B with an IT (step-down) into the 833a valve.

Shearer horn on main system. DJ Frank on the back

Shearer horn w/ JBL 2220 drivers, mid horn w/ RCA Mi-9486 dual compression drivers and Dittmar’s tweeter horn

46 driving 45 – SE Amp

My favourite valves together

Recently I revisited a beloved amp, the SE 45. This time I will share a more orthodox design without sand in play. Surprised? Well, I love lots of iron as well and here is a design I’ve been playing around for some time as I have all the components at hand. 

Driving the 45

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