> H DC resistance (Ohms)
BCP-16 GC M6 >1,000 3,850
BCP-16 GC NI NICKEL >2,000 3,850
BCP-16 GC HN HI NICKEL >3,000 3,850
An earlier post from Paul Joppa on determining which Grid Choke to use
Posted by Paul Joppa on October 28, 2000 at 08:51:07
In Reply to: Parameters for grid chokes-for Gordon or anyone. posted by Adrian on October 27, 2000 at 18:38:38:
There's not much information out there because there's not much experience yet, at least within this audio community. There is no way I know of to get a 100% reliable value, and guarantee you won't want to try another value later.
Basically, the grid choke has to present a high impedance to the previous stage. It replaces the grid leak resistor. As a rough estimate, to get adequate bass you want at least 4 henries for each 1000 ohms of the resistor it replaces. So for example if it replaces a 100k resistor, you want at least 400 henries.
To keep this reasonable, you should first figure out the smallest grid leak resistor that you can use - otherwise the grid choke becomes bigger than necessary. That depends on the driving circuit. As a very rough estimate, if the driver is a triode, take its plate voltage divided by its plate current. For example, a 6SN7 operating at 250v and 8mA has a ratio of 250/0.008 or 31k ohms. The minimum grid choke on the driven stage would be 125 henries. This is a pretty crude approximation, but at least it's easy to calculate.
A higher inductance will give better bass, but it might have a higher capacitance which will limit the treble. So you don't want a choke much bigger than the minimum needed for decent bass. I've not seen a grid choke with a capacitance specification, so that's not as useful an observation as you might hope. I suppose that if the capacitance is smaller than the Miller capacitance of the driven stage, it will probably not have too bad an effect, but again it is dependent on the specific circuit.