Originally posted by mort
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Most of the previous posters are assuming that the poweramp is breaking up before the onset of any preamp distortion. Why? I've only built one Super Reverb but the stock channel stayed pretty darn clean until it was really LOUD. I understand that the poweramp puts a limit on clean, undistorted sound volume. However, that doesn't automatically mean Mort's amp isn't starting to break up in the preamp before the poweramp starts letting go.
Also, no one has bothered to ask Mort what guitar his friend/customer has plugged into the amp (pickup type and output most specifically). "335" could cover a lot ground. Plug a high output humbucker into the Hi input of the Normal channel and I'm reasonably certain that the first two triodes start breaking up first. This is based on experiments in a Super Reverb derivative using a scope. Pedals up front further complicate the question.
The assumption poweramp distortion first may very well be correct, but we don't know without scoping the amp with the user's rig do we?
So, what could we suggest to get more clean headroom (higher output voltage swing without distortion) from the first two stages? This will let Mort figure out where the distortion starts first.
An LED in place of the cap/resistor on the first stage would provide effectively fixed bias on that triode. Assuming his cathode voltage there is about 2 volts, try LEDs that drop 2 and 2.5 volts.
Separate the RC cathode network for the second stage and experiment. In my SR build, I had a switch which added additional resistance between the RC network and ground to reduce the gain from that stage. Start with 470 or 680 ohms first perhaps. This really needs to be switched though to figure anything out.
What about different 12AX7s for those first two stages? Tube choice affects the breakup point in my experience.
Tone stack tweaks might help too if he has really hot input. A 68k slope resistor instead of 100k with increase insertion loss. It also will change the frequency shifting of the tone stack. Lowering the mid cap from .033 to .022 like the AB763 will change things too. Better or worse? I don't know because I don't have the amp in front of me, but even it the poweramp is distorting first we don't know what frequencies break up first. Maybe cutting mids (reduce 6.8k resistor to 4.7 or even 3.3) will do the trick. Maybe a .068 bass cap in place of the .1 could help if the distortion is from speakers with a bit of flabbiness in lower frequencies. From the soundclip, taming the bass a tad might be just the ticket. Instead of tone stack, dropping the first or first two cathode bypass caps might get the amp owner smiling. Nothing radical like a .68uf, but 4.7 or 6.8 could help. If it does, try it again on the second triode.
My main point is that there are some experiments Mort can try instead of throwing up his hands and telling the amp owner "it just is what it is. Tough." Also, our "instrument" is everything from whatever hits the strings to the speaker cone shaking around inside the cab. It's not just the amp in isolation.
BTW do we know what speakers and if there are more efficient alternatives?
One question for Mort: is the schematic drawn wrong for those first two filter caps or did you wire it as drawn? The two 350 volt caps are supposed to be wired in series with a 220k resistor in parallel with each cap. See : AB763 schematic
If wired as drawn, I would replace those caps because then they've been hit wth voltage WAY above their rating. However, I assume that you wired it correctly and just got the schematic fudged up.
Hope this helps,
Chip
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