"It all depends..."
It works like this. With tube amps, the output tubes need to see a high impedance load. Typically we see EL34s designed with a 3400 ohm load and 6L6s with 6600 ohms. So one of the functions of the OT is to transform this load down to something more suitable for the speakers.
It's important to understand that OTs work by fixed ratios and the transformation works both ways. This means that if you have a 3400 ohm primary and the secondary is set to feed an 8 ohm speaker if you put a 16 ohm speaker on it you then have 6800 ohms as the load to the tubes! Or with 4 ohms it becomes 1700 ohms.
Usually OTs are made with a couple of different taps on the speaker side, so that you change the ratio for different speaker loads to keep the primary side load the same. So you can choose different taps with a switch for 4-8-16 ohms but the tube side load stays pretty close to the same. Some modern amps find it cheaper to just use a different jack for each tap than to use a beefy enough switch.
So what happens when you've put a 4 ohm speaker on an 8 ohm tap with your Plexi? You've now got 1700 ohms to the plates of your EL34s but they're not going to immediately explode! :tongue: Things do change somewhat, however.
Tube data sheets will often show curves for typical circuit conditions that plot the optimum plate impedance load for maximum power out and distortion level. Surprisingly, that's usually not the same thing! The best load for the most power will not likely give the lowest distortion.
The curves also show that there's a broad range to the load where the power or distortion doesn't change a huge amount. Many early Marshalls ran EL34s with OTs that had 6600 ohm loads better suited to 6L6s. They still sounded great!
If the load is WAY out of whack bad things can indeed happen. If the load is too low the tubes will strain themselves, wearing out more quickly. If it's too high the voltage swings can get huge and scary, possibly enough to arc inside the tube or worse yet punch shorts into the OT windings.
A 2:1 mismatch is 99% of the time no significant problem. The tone will change but that's a taste thing anyway! :smile: Putting a 4 ohm speaker into an amp set to 16 ohms is more serious. That becomes 13600 ohms and if you're really cranking the amp I'd be worried, if I were you. The same with 16 ohms on a 4 ohm setting.
The short answer is that no, you probably didn't hurt anything. If you're still not certain and wish to dispose of the amp you can send it to me and I'll take care of things for you!:wink:
(Unless it's a 'Boogie. I HATE 'Boogies!):2guns:
Depends on the amp, and for only a few hours it's not likely you hurt anything.ne1roc said:My normal amp setup uses two 2x12 cabinets with the amp impedance at 4 ohms. Last week at practice I only took one cabinet and I forgot to set the amp impedance to 8 ohms. Over the last week, the amp is sounding and playing normal, so it looks like I'm lucky.
What kind of damage can happen to your amp if using the wrong impedance?
It works like this. With tube amps, the output tubes need to see a high impedance load. Typically we see EL34s designed with a 3400 ohm load and 6L6s with 6600 ohms. So one of the functions of the OT is to transform this load down to something more suitable for the speakers.
It's important to understand that OTs work by fixed ratios and the transformation works both ways. This means that if you have a 3400 ohm primary and the secondary is set to feed an 8 ohm speaker if you put a 16 ohm speaker on it you then have 6800 ohms as the load to the tubes! Or with 4 ohms it becomes 1700 ohms.
Usually OTs are made with a couple of different taps on the speaker side, so that you change the ratio for different speaker loads to keep the primary side load the same. So you can choose different taps with a switch for 4-8-16 ohms but the tube side load stays pretty close to the same. Some modern amps find it cheaper to just use a different jack for each tap than to use a beefy enough switch.
So what happens when you've put a 4 ohm speaker on an 8 ohm tap with your Plexi? You've now got 1700 ohms to the plates of your EL34s but they're not going to immediately explode! :tongue: Things do change somewhat, however.
Tube data sheets will often show curves for typical circuit conditions that plot the optimum plate impedance load for maximum power out and distortion level. Surprisingly, that's usually not the same thing! The best load for the most power will not likely give the lowest distortion.
The curves also show that there's a broad range to the load where the power or distortion doesn't change a huge amount. Many early Marshalls ran EL34s with OTs that had 6600 ohm loads better suited to 6L6s. They still sounded great!
If the load is WAY out of whack bad things can indeed happen. If the load is too low the tubes will strain themselves, wearing out more quickly. If it's too high the voltage swings can get huge and scary, possibly enough to arc inside the tube or worse yet punch shorts into the OT windings.
A 2:1 mismatch is 99% of the time no significant problem. The tone will change but that's a taste thing anyway! :smile: Putting a 4 ohm speaker into an amp set to 16 ohms is more serious. That becomes 13600 ohms and if you're really cranking the amp I'd be worried, if I were you. The same with 16 ohms on a 4 ohm setting.
The short answer is that no, you probably didn't hurt anything. If you're still not certain and wish to dispose of the amp you can send it to me and I'll take care of things for you!:wink:
(Unless it's a 'Boogie. I HATE 'Boogies!):2guns: