Just curious. (Again, I know, sorry!)
I built a Fender style amp a few years ago and wired my heaters so that a separate twisted pair was connected between each tube. What I mean is that one twisted pair ended at the two pins and another completely separate twisted pair started at those pins and went to the next tube. This way, there were two wires (one coming, one going) to each of the two pins, totally four wires to each tube (except, of course, the last tube farthest away).
In the trinity diagrams, it looks like the twisted pair goes end to end with one of each color wire somehow sprouting out from the twist for each tube. Is that rally what's happening, or is that just a diagram artifact? Are those wires somehow spliced into the "main" twisted pair, or is that just a simplified drawing?
I hope this isn't a stupid quesiton. I'm just wondering if there aren't some special tips or techniques that I'm not aware of. If I had to do it without a diagram, I would do it the same way I did my other amp. Maybe that's ignorance on my part or maybe it's common sense.
In the photos in this thread (thanks coco)
http://www.trinityamps.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=752 the heater wires appear to be white and blue along the edge of the floor of the chassis. Most of the tubes are obscured just enough to not really see how many wires are comiing out, but it sort of looks like only one white and one blue are going to and from V4 and V5. On the flip side, it sure looks like two white and two blue are coming out of V2.
Also, hope this one isn't really dumb. My kit came with a ready made set of twisted wires. My initial thought was, "Cool! How convenient!" But then, I realized from the photos that there's another twisted pair riding along the top. Seems to go to the footswitch jacks for a non-kit amp, but I'm not sure yet. Just wondering what the intent of that ready made twisted pair was.
Sorry for the newb-ish questions. Warning: More may follow.
