I was digging for images of actual vintage blackface, mid 60's, era AB763 or close, Deluxe or Deluxe REverb amps. With all of the discussion of ground loops, I noticed that these amps all had a piece of heavy buss wire leading from the 'self bias' cap resistor connections, (preamp tubes and tremolo tubes) off the circuit board, to the thin brass plate that is mounted under the pots.
There are at least 3 or 4 of these connections.
Also, there is a black wire leading from the cap board on top of the chassis, through a grommet, inside the chassis, that gets grounded by soldering directly to a blob of solder on the chassis near the power transformer. Also, there is another direct solder connection to the chassis, of two wires leading from the power transformer.
OK, so I don't know: won't this setup be prone to ground loops, since there are (5?) several places where a separate ground wire is connected to the chassis?
The opposite question: the location where the bus wires, and trans wires are connected, there are not a lot of other wires in that area, so I don't see any parallel wiring that might induce a current and cause a ground loop.
But (learned something new last week) I read about eddy currents (especially in aluminum chassis) that could be induced just about anyplace, e.g. around tubes and esp around transformers and chokes
OK obviously these amps are frickin' awesome, and most of us would love to have one, but why didn't they have more problems with ground loops?
There are at least 3 or 4 of these connections.
Also, there is a black wire leading from the cap board on top of the chassis, through a grommet, inside the chassis, that gets grounded by soldering directly to a blob of solder on the chassis near the power transformer. Also, there is another direct solder connection to the chassis, of two wires leading from the power transformer.
OK, so I don't know: won't this setup be prone to ground loops, since there are (5?) several places where a separate ground wire is connected to the chassis?
The opposite question: the location where the bus wires, and trans wires are connected, there are not a lot of other wires in that area, so I don't see any parallel wiring that might induce a current and cause a ground loop.
But (learned something new last week) I read about eddy currents (especially in aluminum chassis) that could be induced just about anyplace, e.g. around tubes and esp around transformers and chokes
OK obviously these amps are frickin' awesome, and most of us would love to have one, but why didn't they have more problems with ground loops?
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