After seeing the PDF that Ed posted about the 700 Service manual., page 10 shows the troubleshooting section... Number 3 just about says it all (popping/clicking/strange sounds)....
View attachment 29114
That is the SOA protection kicking in.
After seeing the PDF that Ed posted about the 700 Service manual., page 10 shows the troubleshooting section... Number 3 just about says it all (popping/clicking/strange sounds)....
View attachment 29114
That is the SOA protection kicking in.
After seeing the PDF that Ed posted about the 700 Service manual., page 10 shows the troubleshooting section... Number 3 just about says it all (popping/clicking/strange sounds)....
View attachment 29114
How do I hook both sets of my CV's to one amp? Is it series so it does not change impedence? How would I do that so as not to hurt my amp. A guy is stacking DQ's w/ a WOPL and my CV's are not amp killers obviously. A diagram of how the wires should be run would be helpful
Thanks in advance

My (admittedly limited) experience suggests that these kinds of forum discussions are valuable insofar as the very knowledgeable folks here have given me the lay of the land information-wise. BUT--to really find which particular pair or set of power tubes sounds best in YOUR amp to YOUR ears, well, that's a tough one, especially if your amp must be manually biased.. his comment is here
Ultimately what I did was pay my tech for an hour's bench time and switch tubes out, on the fly, with him adjusting and re-adjusting the bias on each new set of power tubes (yes, with the amp chassis out of the amp--don't do it at home unless you're a pro) till I found the ones that pleased me most.
Was it worth it? To me, absolutely. I also learned something else firsthand that he had been telling me for years--the tonal differences between different power tubes FAR EXCEEDS any differences I've heard between pre-amp tubes. DRAMATIC changes in tone with power tubes properly adjusted for bias.
If your listening levels are judicious, why not connect your 8-ohm speakers in series for an 16-ohm load. This load was common as evidenced by the 16-ohm taps on may of the vintage amplifiers. The PL amp will run cooler and maybe sound better.
Hello, all.
I'm a recent newbie to this forum - lurked for some time, and finally registered since I have an original Phase Linear 400 that I bought new in 1974.
Because I've not been a regular visitor, I had not seen this thread regarding speaker loading until today - seeing that it's almost three years old until vbnks resurrected it with his post about "tube preferences".
Coincidentally, I did see an earlier reference about "tubes" from WOPL Sniffer in this thread that linked to the amplifiedparts.com website - copied here:
"Read this: https://www.amplifiedparts.com/tech-corner/speaker-impedance-power-handling-and-wiring "
This copied link addresses speaker impedance relative to tube amplifiers - and driver impedance is very important for tube output circuits; so much so that tube amplifiers need output transformers for proper operation.
However, I did not know the Phase Linear amps were sensitive to lower speaker loads. Can they not handle 4-ohm loading? I actually have never driven my PL400 with two pair of speakers, but I have done this with several other power amplifiers. I presently have two pair of 8-ohm speakers in parallel on an older Carver amp, and I regularly use 8-ohm drivers in parallel on power amps with vehicle audio systems. In fact, I've heard of some amplifiers that can handle 2-ohm speaker loads. I consider parallel speaker loading to be normal for solid-state amplifiers, and most should handle it without problem.
Why the caution against wiring parallel speakers with the PL amps? Certainly it might require additional cooling, but with judicious listening levels I would think this is a normal setup for home audio. Are the PL amps that weak for current carrying capacity on the output devices?
Thanks,
John
Maybe, but then a lot of guitar players would be losers.I only said that tubes are for losers LOL![]()
Maybe, but then a lot of guitar players would be losers.![]()