If I would connect a right channel output of a preamp to a 100 Watts monoblock and its right-channel to a 250 Watts one then the right speaker will be 2.5 times louder than the left one. But switching a 100 Watts vacuum tube power amp to a lower power output of TRIODE mode won’t simply make it a 65 Watts one as it still produces the same sound volume (regardless if it is in TRIODE or TETRODE mode)? How then a lower power output of TRIODE mode manifest itself?
Should the sound level in Triode mode be lower than in Tetrode
I've just got Manley Lab Series 100 vacuum tube monoblocks. And I am a bit confused what to expect from TRIODE / TETRODE modes. The user manual says that:
"...When the switch is in the upper position, the amplifier is in TRIODE mode which will produce half the power of TETRODE operation."
In the same user manual under the Specifications section I find that the Output Power for:
"...When the switch is in the upper position, the amplifier is in TRIODE mode which will produce half the power of TETRODE operation."
In the same user manual under the Specifications section I find that the Output Power for:
TETRODE: 135Watts (@1.5% THD 5 ohm load)
TRIODE: 65 Watts (@1.5% THD 5 ohm load)
I have been running a number of db level measuring tests by switching from TRIODE to TETRODE mode keeping the volume knob unchanged. But it appears that the sound volume remains exactly the same in both TRIODE and TETRODE modes. Shouldn't I expect the sound level in TRIODE mode to be half of what in TETRODE mode?