@bifwynne
Roger has one of the best tube matching services in the country.
I suspect that one reason you have issues with the taps is that the ARC amp really needs a few more db of feedback; 15 db is slightly on the low side to get right.
Thanks for the compliment. I did start the whole computer matching program and feel the only correct way to do it is at fixed plate current which I can enter in the test program.
Whatever feedback they use is not of importance, its the resulting output impedance that matters. For instance, a triode output tube has inherently low output impedance and provides a damping factor typically of 4-5 without feedback. This is childs play to figure out. Its just the output transformer primary impedance divided by the plate resistance. For a 300B tube that is about 3500/700 ohms= 5.
For a pentode output tube its much higher for a 6550 about 3000/27,000 = 0.11 ouch, less than one. Now we need a lot of feedback to get that down. Even triode connected it is only 0.22. Thus not a good triode comparred to the 300B.
This is why SET ampifiers can be made without feedback. These tubes were created to do this job. The 45, 2A3, PX4, PX25 all have similar characteristics as does the 6EM7 which I use because it is very close to a 2A3.
There are three classes of output tubes. Low impedance triodes as mentioned above, Pentodes (EL34, EL84) and Beam Power tubes (6550, 6L6, and all KT series). The pentodes and beam tubes all have very high plate resistance, so high that we don’t even try to match it.
When I was a young lad the idea of measuring feedback was a total mystery until I found out how easy it is to measure. Heres how you do it.
Simply connect the proper load to the amplifier, set the output to a very low voltage, remove the feedback and see how many dB the output rises. ARC looks at another way, which I appreciate and use in my thinking. If you think of an amplifier as a power supply then you can easily measure its regulation, as power supply specs do. It can be noted either in percent or dB. This is measured by noting the output voltage with the load connected and then with no load. We want to see the smallest change, as does the speaker.
This is a great way to demonstrate what is going on with your speaker. If you pull the load on an amplifier with a damping factor of 1 the output will go up exactly 6dB. It will do about the same on your speaker when it goes above 20 ohms!