LevinGuitar
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2019
- Messages
- 499
34v can be enough, try a lower ratio transformer for higher gain. What voltage do you have on cathode?
As far I know there would be unlikely 30v difference between cathode and grid in a working mic. Tubes tend to stabilize themselves to a certain point. But I can be wrong1.1V at the cathode.
I measured the voltage when turned on, the voltage gradually increases to 75 volts and then decreases to 32 volts.
What is your measurement rig?I tried to make the polarization close to that of the Lomo 19-a9 microphone, but the voltage on the capsule was too low.
Maybe I'm measuring incorrectly?
I took measurements with another multimeter.
I get an increase from 0 to 115 volts (as the tube warms up), then a decrease to 32-36 volts.
Yes the pinout is correct.Without any connection at all in the grid, with the cathode at 1v, you should have near 0v or slightly negative voltage at grid (respective to ground). Measure anode voltage with that configuration. If connecting a capacitor from grid to anode, the voltage of the anode nor cathode does not change, the grid surely can't measure different voltage from before. Cathode, grid and anode influence each other, you can't have a different value in one of them without changing the rest of them
Does your tube pinout is properly connected btw?
Is the tube ok? Does the mic works?
Measure grid respective to ground only,
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