There are definitely bigger SE outputs than the 1642, but they are definitely custom order stuff. I have some Monoliths on the shelf that await duty in either an 833 amp or a 250TH amp whenever there is time...
If you want simple for 833 filaments, a Meanwell LRS-200-12 turned all the way down works nicely. You also get a nice soft start out of these modules.
Our headphone amps are parallel feed, so the grid current drawn by the 833 will saturate the output transformers and it won't work all that well unfortunately. Our headphone amps also don't have 600 ohm taps on the output transformers since that's practically useless for headphone duty. There are plenty of line transformers that have 600 ohm windings but they won't handle the voltage, then there are those weird headphone amp transformers that have 600 ohm windings for some reason, which I'm guessing is what you're using.
2W into 600 ohms from a 45 is 34V RMS, or about 47V peak. It looks from the curves like being able to swing +/-55V peak would get max out an 833 with a 5K OT running at that operating point, but you're still making over 50W with what you've got so it seems hard to complain.
What you haven't addressed is that the plate impedance of the 845 will be quite high and the winding resistance of the 1642 is also going to add to that, which will lead to a very low damping factor (looks like maybe 1.25) and undesirable levels of distortion. When you make a higher powered amp, people will pair it with less sensitive speakers that are designed for amps with higher damping, so you'd want to shoot for a DF of 4 or more if at all possible. In order to do this, you need to use feedback of some sort or a much higher impedance transformer, and this is one of the more difficult aspects of designing amps like these. Unless you can get what you need with cathode feedback, you'll find that your interstage transformer and output transformer together present far too much phase shift to make an amp with global feedback, so you'll have to get creative to make that work. I have found that even a good series feed output transformer on its own can make an amp like this conditionally stable, and you don't want to explain to your 833 amp customers why their ESLs melted!
Lastly, you could certainly use parallel feed iron for an 833. That was actually part of the point of parallel feed iron in the first place!
« Last Edit: September 03, 2021, 05:28:39 PM by Paul Birkeland »
Paul "PB" Birkeland
Bottlehead Grunt & The Repro Man