Finally got the Lundahl 70H/60mA chokes and amorphous core OPTs installed in the Kaiju. That was a bit involved - although there's enough space, the chokes and OPTs have different mounting hole spacings and thus require mounting on standoffs and a particular order of installation that was hard for me to keep straight in my head late at night.
I also decreased B+ and now get about 67mA plate current (previously 75mA). Jac informs me that the Lundahl chokes have about 15% additional headroom, so I'll leave it as is for now. I fired it up and can detect no vibration from the chokes, so they seem reasonably happy. To get closer to 60mA without further decreasing the bias, I may swap in 1.2K cathode resistors in place of the stock 1K.
BUT ... I can't listen to it!!! Two day ago, my right ear started buzzing loudly, and over the course of the day went mostly silent. Since then, my hearing in the right ear has been muted for bass and sensitive to mids and treble (with weird reverb). I hadn't listened to music for a week or more (both my SII-45 and Kaiju were in various states of disassembly), and was not otherwise exposed to anything loud. And today my left ear is a bit wonky -- so most likely a virus. So critical listening will have to wait until this clears up. I tried listening only through my left ear last night -- but that was less than satisfactory.
In the meantime, I think I'll install the Kaiju iron in the SII-45 and do my best to tweak the operating point for the 45B. I'll be able to use the full winding of the Kaiju choke. And one day I'll get to listen to it.
Thinking ahead to my eventual rebuild of the SII-45B amp: What are people's opinions on the pros and cons of fixed bias instead of cathode bias for the output tubes? All this playing around with B+ and plate current got me thinking that fixed bias might give some additional control over operating points -- or put differently, less dependence on how off-the-shelf iron interacts with the tubes. I was already planning to have regulated B+ (Linear Audio makes a regulator kit that can handle 600V+ at 200mA+). Maybe I could add a regulated negative bias supply. Pete Millet makes one, and maybe there are others out there. Among other things, I figure this would allow me to use the full B+ as plate-to-cathode and thus to use lower B+ than would be required with cathode auto-biasing (which drops a lot of voltage across the cathode resistor). I haven't looked into this in any detail yet, but if the regulated bias supply used trim pots to dial in the -ve voltage, I could install some voltage meters to monitor bias and some sort of set-screw mechanism to make adjustments on the fly.
Anyone played around with fixed bias and have some thoughts?
cheers and many thanks, Derek