11K output to 250K load is quite effective at reducing the inductor values necessary for 3 pole low pass filters of the constant K type in discussion, however, plugging some more numbers in it doesn’t help very much in the high pass arena. Still need some serious Henries for that. Also, once you attempt to make 4 pole inductor/cap constant K filters, which is the ideal for my personal stuff but perhaps too excessive, the 11K to 250K still then requires huge inductors for both LPF and HPF.
I admit i am tempted to use either a cathode follower as an intermediary stage or to put this constant K filter after the output transformer, both of which makes this thread off topic hahah. I could be wrong but I think the cheapest solution, and perhaps simplest, would be the latter… putting the constant-K EQ after the transformer and then load it down with the load that was otherwise going to load the transformer, such as a slug resistor which was already the plan.
Since I’m working in the context on a console, i will mention that I’m going to then being going straight into a network of resistors for mixing. My concern of course is the mixing network varying the load so much that the constant-K EQ’s preceding the mixing network at each channel would be thrown all over the place depending on the level/pan settings of everything around it. But I think i somewhat stabilized the loads from going all over the place by choosing to go straight into tube grids at the summing amps rather than using input transformers there which have a much lower input impedance. That way i have high impedance inputs that allow the mixing network some leeway to not load down the channel outputs as much. I haven’t pinned down mixing values yet, but maybe I can get away with not having to buffer anything, and just have the output transformer pass through the constant-K EQ and then have its slug to make it stay around 600R and the lighter load mix network not vary that load too much and the EQ’s will be fairly consistent.
One nice thing about multiple pole EQ’s, in my mind anyways, is that the repeated pole implementation helps to stabilize the frequency of the EQ and it can handle more variation in load than a single pole could. This could be something I’m making up though.
I know that a cathode follower buffer will be the only way to solidify things in either of those two approaches (in the post-output version I’m referring to a cathode follower being put at each channel’s entry to the mix network) and keep the EQ exactly the same at all times. So maybe that’s destiny. And if that’s the case, it’s either going to be inside the tube stages or it’s going to be after the output transformer. But if it’s a V2, and let’s pretend the cathode follower puts out a perfect 600 ohms output impedance… if i put the 600ohm constant-K filter there can i load it down with a 600R resistor at the grid input of V3? I’v never seen that kind of value entering a tube so it seems inappropriate.