Hello everyone, as the title suggests I'm new, and boy this looks like a site that might suck my time away...
I've been playing guitar now for about 7 years now and I've been itching to get into some more hardcore electrical work for a couple of those years. I've always had a fascination with audio gear as my dad is a real budget audiophile. I've inherited his mind for music and gearhead'edness (if that's a word), and I've also gotten parts of my mom's father's engineering brain. I've been building things since I could crawl and my grandfather spent most of his life revolutionizing power plants, oil refineries, and early telecommunications. If only I had half of his brain...
Anyway, back on topic.
So I'm huge gear nut, who's also kinda on the cheap (half because it's more fun that way). I run a silvertone twin twelve as my main amp which I picked up for $200 in decent shape.
A few weeks ago I picked up a HH Scott stereomaster tube amp (222A model). It's a 4 x EL84 amp that should make around 13/14 watts RMS per channel. It has 4 12AX7's plus two 6GH8 tubes for PI duty. These amps had a strange PI setup that actually has POT for adjusting load between the tubes, so in theory you could match them better. Kinda wierd...
So I fire it up, no go. Upon inspection it had an obviously bad rectifier (cracked!!!). So I'd read on several sites that these amps do well with SS rectifiers, so I figured I'd build one. Wire'd up some diodes and off we went. Fired up that time and I got noise from the speakers, quite a bit of hum actually, with no response from it's input source... hmmm. So I left it until I could open it up.
Opened it up and couldn't find anything wrong. I LOOKED for a good hour or so. I'd been working on it in my bedroom, and as I'm sitting on this very computer now, while in bed I looked over at the bottom panel of the amp (which is off still) and noticed a big brown spot/stain... Cap juice.. ewww (it's even brown like REAL crap...)
Anyway. I've learned a lot even up to this point. I'm reading all that I can and I think I'm absorbing it relatively well. My hopes is to get this amp working and slowly convert it to guitar use. I'd like to keep as many of the original parts as I can, so basically remove all the Hi-Fi junk I don't need and replace cap and resistor values as needed. The plates are run extremely low on this amp (sub 150 on some and sub 200 on all preamp tubes) so I think much of my modding will be getting the gain turned up a bit without inducing any problems. I'm also huge on just using my guitar volume and touch to control an amp, and I've actually considered changing the volume to be a master volume only in the preamp and running the amp at a "fixed gain" and just use the guitar to control the input. Might be a bit crazy. We'll see how loud this thing is once I get it up and running.
What's really frustrating is knowing what caps to buy. Some people seem to be swearing by atoms, but I was really hoping to stay with a twist-lock can but I have no idea what brands sound like what. I'm hoping since it's a filter cap it won't matter a whole bunch.
I'm probably also going to switch back a stock GZ34 rectifier since I'm not 100% the cap spewed it's guts before the SS rectifier. This whole ordeal also makes me wonder if I should just drop $60 to recap the whole filter supply.
So yea, that's basically it. I plan on using this amp in stereo, and it'll be PLENTY loud enough for me, if not TOO loud actually. I'd like to get a decent amount of gain out of it, but the character of the gain is much more important to me. I also plan to build a semi-open back 2 x 10 to go with it. I'm hoping to use a flanger into it with mild settings to get an ADT (automatic double tracking) effect.
I'm not exactly sure what I'm expecting people to respond to this with. But any advice or suggestions would be wonderful. Books to recommend that I can get from the library or used on amazon or something would be great. I've just finished Dave Hunter's book "The Guitar Amp Handbook". It was a good read and I picked up quite a bit of information thanks to his easy to understand style of going through the workings of an amp. Now I need to go back and read some of the tech info pages I never understood...
I've been playing guitar now for about 7 years now and I've been itching to get into some more hardcore electrical work for a couple of those years. I've always had a fascination with audio gear as my dad is a real budget audiophile. I've inherited his mind for music and gearhead'edness (if that's a word), and I've also gotten parts of my mom's father's engineering brain. I've been building things since I could crawl and my grandfather spent most of his life revolutionizing power plants, oil refineries, and early telecommunications. If only I had half of his brain...
Anyway, back on topic.
So I'm huge gear nut, who's also kinda on the cheap (half because it's more fun that way). I run a silvertone twin twelve as my main amp which I picked up for $200 in decent shape.
A few weeks ago I picked up a HH Scott stereomaster tube amp (222A model). It's a 4 x EL84 amp that should make around 13/14 watts RMS per channel. It has 4 12AX7's plus two 6GH8 tubes for PI duty. These amps had a strange PI setup that actually has POT for adjusting load between the tubes, so in theory you could match them better. Kinda wierd...
So I fire it up, no go. Upon inspection it had an obviously bad rectifier (cracked!!!). So I'd read on several sites that these amps do well with SS rectifiers, so I figured I'd build one. Wire'd up some diodes and off we went. Fired up that time and I got noise from the speakers, quite a bit of hum actually, with no response from it's input source... hmmm. So I left it until I could open it up.
Opened it up and couldn't find anything wrong. I LOOKED for a good hour or so. I'd been working on it in my bedroom, and as I'm sitting on this very computer now, while in bed I looked over at the bottom panel of the amp (which is off still) and noticed a big brown spot/stain... Cap juice.. ewww (it's even brown like REAL crap...)
Anyway. I've learned a lot even up to this point. I'm reading all that I can and I think I'm absorbing it relatively well. My hopes is to get this amp working and slowly convert it to guitar use. I'd like to keep as many of the original parts as I can, so basically remove all the Hi-Fi junk I don't need and replace cap and resistor values as needed. The plates are run extremely low on this amp (sub 150 on some and sub 200 on all preamp tubes) so I think much of my modding will be getting the gain turned up a bit without inducing any problems. I'm also huge on just using my guitar volume and touch to control an amp, and I've actually considered changing the volume to be a master volume only in the preamp and running the amp at a "fixed gain" and just use the guitar to control the input. Might be a bit crazy. We'll see how loud this thing is once I get it up and running.
What's really frustrating is knowing what caps to buy. Some people seem to be swearing by atoms, but I was really hoping to stay with a twist-lock can but I have no idea what brands sound like what. I'm hoping since it's a filter cap it won't matter a whole bunch.
I'm probably also going to switch back a stock GZ34 rectifier since I'm not 100% the cap spewed it's guts before the SS rectifier. This whole ordeal also makes me wonder if I should just drop $60 to recap the whole filter supply.
So yea, that's basically it. I plan on using this amp in stereo, and it'll be PLENTY loud enough for me, if not TOO loud actually. I'd like to get a decent amount of gain out of it, but the character of the gain is much more important to me. I also plan to build a semi-open back 2 x 10 to go with it. I'm hoping to use a flanger into it with mild settings to get an ADT (automatic double tracking) effect.
I'm not exactly sure what I'm expecting people to respond to this with. But any advice or suggestions would be wonderful. Books to recommend that I can get from the library or used on amazon or something would be great. I've just finished Dave Hunter's book "The Guitar Amp Handbook". It was a good read and I picked up quite a bit of information thanks to his easy to understand style of going through the workings of an amp. Now I need to go back and read some of the tech info pages I never understood...
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