coco wrote:
Newcie Brown - Right on!!
I flipped back & forth and agree. The 6CM6 have more meat & bottom end. The 84's seem thinner and less full. I imagine other EL84 tubes will sound different, but in this case, I likes the 6CM6 better
Yeah the M6s do seem thicker. I have 2 different sets of 84s and they both sound thinner and brighter than the M6s.
coco wrote:
Was the volume level about the same? Breakup at the same or close levels etc.
It would be interesting to hear your comparison. Tone, Feel, breakup etc.
Volume levels were about the same. I know the 84s were definitely breaking up because I could hear them. But with the M6s, I do not hear much difference in breakup with my PPIMV at 5 vs 10. With the 84s I hear a difference as the tubes get more saturation as I turn the PPIMV up. You can definitely hear it in the clip of the 84s. You can hear what some call a "smearing" of the tone.
As far as tone and feel go, the tone is a little darker. As I said earlier the M6s seem to have a little more bottom end and a little less top end. Not as bright as the 84s. Single coils sound better with the M6s. With the 84s I had to turn the treble down to around 4 or 5.
Feel is a little tighter/stiffer. It may be because I'm not driving the M6s as hard (still may need some tuning around the PI and bias). With the 84s when I would dig in the notes would get soft and squishy and compressed. Not getting that as much with the M6s.
coco wrote:
So the ONLY change you made to run the 6CM6 was the grid stopper resister?
Well I had already put in the 22K tail resistor in the PI (more on that in a minute). The only other change was to the fixed bias supply. I had to change the resistor from 10k to 33k because I was not getting enough negative voltage for the M6s. When I first turned it on and checked the bias they were running at 58 milliamps cathode current.
After changing the resistor I got em down to 25 milliamps where they should be. Also I have my negative feedback switchable between 47k and 147k. With the 84s I was running the 47k(more feedback) to dampen the output more. With the M6s I went with the 147k(less feedback) to allow more drive.
So back to the PI tail resistor. I still have some buzz/fizz and I also noticed that even when I turn the PPIMV way down, the buzz/fizz is still there a little. So that got me thinking the problem isn't just in the power tubes. (I should probably start another thread for this.) The short of it is that I thought with the 1959/1987 preamp spec I must be slamming the PI pretty hard so I thought I would try lowering the PI tail to reduce breakup in the PI and just turn down the PPIMV to save the 84s. Now with the M6s, it seems I might even be able to go a little lower. I might try 10K in the tail a see what it sounds like.