P
paulyc
Well-known member
Anyone ever heard of this ? What would be the advantage ? I saw it on a Hermanson build thread on FB. I’ve reached out to Henrik, waiting for his answer but figured I’d ask here too.
Heinrik wrote the description.That helps. Again, I think because the PI is part of the power section, I think the writer (of that description) is just saying the phase inverter is tube vs solid state. Which to most of us, would be pretty obvious as Hermansson wouldn't put a solid state phase inverter in one of his amps (in this case, his modded Marshall). That would take some serious reverse engineering to do that me thinks. Again, I'm not an EE nor amp builder. So my guess is that this Meshuggah amp has 2 or 3- normal preamp tubes, a 12a_7 tube for buffered FX, and a 12a_7 in the power section as the Phase Inverter. Keep in mind, a preamp 'stage' does not equate to the number of preamp tubes. Each preamp tubes has 2 sides, A and B. Each can act as a 'stage'. A picture might speak a thousand words. I'm jumping on google now
Do any of the smart people here want to confirm or correct that?
I.e. Peavey 6505 MH uses transistors in PI.Ive never seen a tube amp with a solid state phase inverter...
Bruce Egnater agrees with you… still waiting on Henrik.I’ve never heard the phrase “tube buffered phase inverter” so I’m not totally sure what he may mean by it.
I’ve read about “post phase inverter driver” tubes, which is basically another tube between the phase inverter and the power tubes. I’m not super well versed on it, but they seem to have been used on some larger amps that run 3 tubes in parallel (like maybe a 6 X 6550 amp)
I taught Bruce everything he knows lolBruce Egnater agrees with you… still waiting on Henrik.
As @Aynirar27 mentioned already, when driving lot of high power tubes, you have an option to:Ive never seen a tube amp with a solid state phase inverter, and I don’t think he’s referring to a regular tube phase inverter. I know VHT/Fryette used 12AU7 tubes as the phase inverter tube to drive their power sections, the way it was explained to me was the AU7 has less gain but more current and lower output impedance, so it actually drove the power sections harder but cleaner. BUT, AU7 tubes are getting hard to find, so I was wondering if using a tube buffered phase inverter accomplishes something similar (more current/lower impedance) but still uses commonly available AX7 tubes.
Maybe they say things differently across the pond but I think it’s gotta be a long tail PI given everybody’s used one for the past 70 years of amp building. There’s not a lot of room to reinvent the wheel in terms of phase inverters.