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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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Although RDH4 is the 'bible' for tube designers I am always on the lookout for good tube books and I
found one a few weeks ago. It is 'Thermionic Valve Circuits' 4th edition by Emyrs Williams from 1961. Though by no means as detailed as RDH4 the writer has a knack of explaining things in a way I can grasp that RDH4 lacks. Plenty of good stuff on tube fundamentals, af amplifiers, NFb and power supplies. Cheers Ian |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On Sep 28, 7:27*pm, Ian Bell wrote:
Although RDH4 is the 'bible' for tube designers I am always on the lookout for good tube books and I found one a few weeks ago. It is 'Thermionic Valve Circuits' 4th edition by Emyrs Williams from 1961. Though by no means as detailed as RDH4 the writer has a knack of explaining things in a way I can grasp that RDH4 lacks. Plenty of good stuff on tube fundamentals, af amplifiers, NFb and power supplies. Cheers Ian When I became serious about tube amp design after 1993 I trawled around the second hand book stores to find **ANYTHING** on electronics written before 1965. What one book didn't explain well, another one did, and I agree RDH4 cannot be everything for everyone, but its VERY good. I could not help building my own test gear and chose some SS and opamps for much of it and so I bought a pile of post 1960 books as well as the earlier stuff. At that time, being without any books would have kept me utterly ignorant and unable to answer the 1,001 questions I asked each day about what I was farnakling about with in my shed. There was nobody else I could ask. I didn't go online until 2000. Now all the good old books which old engineers gave to bookstores have all dissappeared since the stores realised their worth as collectables, and most got shipped out to buyers OS. Now the second hand bookstores have almost nothing worth buying. Some ppl are asking, "****, WTF is a book?" Patrick Turner. |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On Sep 28, 10:27*am, Ian Bell wrote:
Although RDH4 is the 'bible' for tube designers I am always on the lookout for good tube books and I found one a few weeks ago. It is 'Thermionic Valve Circuits' 4th edition by Emyrs Williams from 1961. Though by no means as detailed as RDH4 the writer has a knack of explaining things in a way I can grasp that RDH4 lacks. Plenty of good stuff on tube fundamentals, af amplifiers, NFb and power supplies. Cheers Ian There are only two books I've ever run across that deserve to stand with the RDH: MIT Radiation Laboratory Series, Volume 18, Vacuum Tube Amplifiers, Valley & Wallman (editors), Boston Technical Publishers, Inc, 1964 (probably various earlier editions too). But I doubt it is quite what you want as it is at a much higher level than the RDH. It does however have everything RDH doesn't have, including bootstrap circuits, though it doesn't call them that. This is a compendium of the knowledge developed in the wartime pressure cooker, and I've never met anyone who knew what it is to speak of Valley and Wallman with less than awe; it may be difficult but it is truly very rewarding. As an example, my work on the impedance of SRPP combinations with dissimilar valves or tail resistors was referenced to inspiration I found in Valley and Wallman. Audio Systems by Julian L Bernstein, Wiley, NY 1966. He was the Associate Dean of the RCA Institutes, where the apprentices and engineers were trained, and it shows in the part of the book dealing with amplifiers (the entire system is dealt with, including the most comprehensive account of impedance matching for studio work I know of). A stunningly thorough book. That comprehensive audio transfer function formula I published a few years ago was inspired by Bernstein's clear account of what happens to the signal inside an amplifier. With the RDH, Valley & Wallman, and Bernstein, on your bookshelf, there is nothing in valve amplifiers that you cannot build or work out by applying a modicum of intelligence. At a more easily comprehensible level than either of the above, I've heard Tremayne's Audio Encyclopedia well spoken of, though I don't have a copy. I should also say that when I started out in tube DIY twenty years ago, I found Norman Crowhurst invaluable, though he is a bit of a variable quantity; you have to hunt out the key foundation articles and ignore the doclat-filler. Andre Jute Visit Jute on Amps at http://www.audio-talk.co.uk/fiultra/ "wonderfully well written and reasoned information for the tube audio constructor" John Broskie TubeCAD & GlassWare "an unbelievably comprehensive web site containing vital gems of wisdom" Stuart Perry Hi-Fi News & Record Review |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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I became serious about tube amp design after 1993 I trawled
around the second hand book stores to find **ANYTHING** on electronics written before 1965. What one book didn't explain well, another one did, and I agree RDH4 cannot be everything for everyone, but its VERY good. I could not help building my own test gear and chose some SS and opamps for much of it and so I bought a pile of post 1960 books as well as the earlier stuff. At that time, being without any books would have kept me utterly ignorant and unable to answer the 1,001 questions I asked each day about what I was farnakling about with in my shed. There was nobody else I could ask. I didn't go online until 2000. RDH 4 is a good resource but I don't push it until earlier, simpler books are read and understood. Actually one of the best resources are the old ARRL Radio Amateur's Handbooks from the tube era. Remember, every AM transmitter was just a CW transmitter with the secondary of an audio power amp's transformer in series with the plate supply of the transmitter's output stage. Even simpler are the Powell and Zarchy "boy's books". BTW, I am more and more of the belief that one is better off to start with solid state rather than tubes for a great many reasons and that only after one has thoroughly learned to follow the signal and power across a schematic and understands basic AC and DC electricity _cold_ should tubes be allowed to be touched. Now all the good old books which old engineers gave to bookstores have all dissappeared since the stores realised their worth as collectables, and most got shipped out to buyers OS. Most better books are available as reprints new, or for free on line as .pdfs. |
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