I saw this article today and was struck by the gray box titled "Speaker Loading & Valve Amplifiers"
https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques/understanding-impedance"Whereas most modern solid-state amplifiers are virtually bombproof in terms of whether their outputs see proper loudspeakers (of any nominal impedance) or a short or open circuit, most valve amplifiers are far less tolerant. In fact, the majority of vintage valve amps will self-destruct if driven without the correct speaker load attached! The reasons are complex and depend to some extent on the design of the output circuit, but can be boiled down to what are called 'reflected' impedances..."
I've never seen this kind of warning in the bottlehead manuals, so I assume our output circuits, e.g. in the S.E.X. I recently built, are designed to mitigate this problem. I'm curious how one designs such an output circuit.
The reason for my curiosity is that I was building a reproduction Fender 5E3 based guitar amp
https://www.mojotone.com/site/TT_SB2_Files/img/home/Tweed%20Deluxe%20Manual%20.pdfSchematic here:
https://www.mojotone.com/Amp_Kits/Tweed/Deluxe_5E3_SCH.pdfand the build manual does warn about running it without a speaker plugged in. So I was wondering what the design differences between output stages are that would exacerbate or mitigate this unloaded operation issue.
Thanks for any insight or pointers!