Last month I showed the 6GE5 compactron beam pentode and mentioned it's usability as an output tube in a single ended amp. I went through the compactron series tubes to find a suitable driver. And this is what I found: The 6AG9
Since I have a preference for all triode amps, I concentrated on triodes only. There are quite a few of them in the compactron series. Some combined with other triodes, diodes or pentodes in one bottle.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6A1WZZz8gAkXTw-bK4s3tilaBJUGIqZUlY1DGaAkXnaf9aQ2pURaWBwCrvHtSNc8GOq6q9SC7ZuaDJilAI1P_c3Vdj9S3QqZZY5H2gC4e0WYvEAjPJw7X7TqHSu7YPdnOIobwZRJYNGM/s1600/pinout.jpg)
And this is how it looks like in real life:
Quite alright if the region to the left is avoided!
Most 6AG9s in my stock came unmarked in bulk pack like those above.
Here a 6AG9 mage by General Electric:
The 12-Pin base:
Let's have a look how it is constructed inside!
Removing the glass reveals a better view of the details:
The pentode section takes up most of the space inside. The triode section (top) is separated by some space and a screen from the pentode (silver sheet of metal).
A view of the side of the pentode section:
The top:
The heater wire can be nicely seen coming out of the top and connecting across the tube between the sections.
The heater wire removed:
The part with more folds heats the pentode.
The triode section:
The triode electrodes separated:
The grid:
Cathode:
The triode grid is circular shaped:
The shield which separates triode and pentode:
The pentode section, cathode, control grid and screen grid on the left, plate and suppressor grid on the right:
The grids separated from the cathode:
The control grid has an extremely fine pitch between the wires:
A very well made tube, completely overlooked by audio designers!
In the meantime the tube serves as driver in a 6GE5 amp. Stay tuned for a report.
Best regards
Thomas