(these are some of my general (hobbyist level) musings) :
as the term "electronic circuits" implies, there are loops everywhere AC, DC or both (seems a good idea to habituate yourself to think in terms of loops)
the (probably overly simplified) essence:
V/R=I and basic transfomer action
V/R=I
current flows over an impedance, creates voltage drop. When part of that loop flows over ground, there is a voltage drop, so an error (not the ideal "zero nothing happening here" situation), so managing (so how do you connect grounds together so the circuit works like it should without problems) the various returns and connecting them in a way that makes sense is key (might be harder when things get more complex)
(probably familiar?) example:
the 1 ohm resistor on the cathode. Typically on a power tube, depends on the tube but maybe 30-40-ish milliamps static (no signal) state. And of course if you've kept monitoring while you played the amp, you notice more voltage drop (so there can be more change over the ground). (The 1 ohm resistance makes things "more obvious", but since ground wires, traces, etc. have finite impedance so there are still things happening, and it's not "just zero".)
basic transformer action (more a layout thing I suppose) :
as mentioned, there are loops everywhere. If you have a loop on top or inside each other (and you want that) then good, but if not bad. So use basic techniques like distance (move it away), keep loop areas small (less inductance, less radiation), turn one loop so (orthogonal? right angle sort of relationship--example on PCBs many times there is a jumper over a trace at a strict right angle. Both are part of different loops, so if you can't avoid them being close cross them at strict right angles to avoid interaction), also shielding (shielding doesn't have to be a shielded cable, you can obtain the effect by laying wire on the chassis--if you have a corner available, you get both side and bottom).
(maybe familiar (to a guitarist)) examples:
-if you get close to the amp with your guitar (pickup/s) to the output transformer and power transfomer some weird stuff will happen, but move away and back to normal
-think about a 12A_7 (assuming AC heaters) which has a noise sensitive input (grid). How did the tube designers deal with the noise source (AC heaters = hum) going into the tube? (I think) it's the relative angle thing. (Basically) the heater goes in, makes a sharp 180 degree turn on goes back out. The cathode is around the heaters, and the grid winding is around the cathode (should be pretty close?). I don't think the grid winding can be perfectly a "T" or cross since it has to run lengthwise (so needs a bit of angle), but generally close? The connections from the tube pins (inside the tube) and the placement of those "L" shaped wire things I would guess are very deliberately placed and worked out (again distance, relative angles at work).
-when you get less buzz when touching the guitar ground (bridge, jack, whatever), I think this is shielding effect at play. Your body is sort of a ground plane under the guitar electronics (and maybe the body to guitar circuit C is more effective because the circuitry is higher impedance?).
like loudthud mentioned with the Fender and relatively low gain, you can probably be more lax with things if gain (and bandwidth?) is lower(narrower) (and maybe if currents are low as in a battery operated efx pedal?). If you "do" high gain I would guess you'd probably have to execute things more technically correctly out of necessity.
as the term "electronic circuits" implies, there are loops everywhere AC, DC or both (seems a good idea to habituate yourself to think in terms of loops)
the (probably overly simplified) essence:
V/R=I and basic transfomer action
V/R=I
current flows over an impedance, creates voltage drop. When part of that loop flows over ground, there is a voltage drop, so an error (not the ideal "zero nothing happening here" situation), so managing (so how do you connect grounds together so the circuit works like it should without problems) the various returns and connecting them in a way that makes sense is key (might be harder when things get more complex)
(probably familiar?) example:
the 1 ohm resistor on the cathode. Typically on a power tube, depends on the tube but maybe 30-40-ish milliamps static (no signal) state. And of course if you've kept monitoring while you played the amp, you notice more voltage drop (so there can be more change over the ground). (The 1 ohm resistance makes things "more obvious", but since ground wires, traces, etc. have finite impedance so there are still things happening, and it's not "just zero".)
basic transformer action (more a layout thing I suppose) :
as mentioned, there are loops everywhere. If you have a loop on top or inside each other (and you want that) then good, but if not bad. So use basic techniques like distance (move it away), keep loop areas small (less inductance, less radiation), turn one loop so (orthogonal? right angle sort of relationship--example on PCBs many times there is a jumper over a trace at a strict right angle. Both are part of different loops, so if you can't avoid them being close cross them at strict right angles to avoid interaction), also shielding (shielding doesn't have to be a shielded cable, you can obtain the effect by laying wire on the chassis--if you have a corner available, you get both side and bottom).
(maybe familiar (to a guitarist)) examples:
-if you get close to the amp with your guitar (pickup/s) to the output transformer and power transfomer some weird stuff will happen, but move away and back to normal
-think about a 12A_7 (assuming AC heaters) which has a noise sensitive input (grid). How did the tube designers deal with the noise source (AC heaters = hum) going into the tube? (I think) it's the relative angle thing. (Basically) the heater goes in, makes a sharp 180 degree turn on goes back out. The cathode is around the heaters, and the grid winding is around the cathode (should be pretty close?). I don't think the grid winding can be perfectly a "T" or cross since it has to run lengthwise (so needs a bit of angle), but generally close? The connections from the tube pins (inside the tube) and the placement of those "L" shaped wire things I would guess are very deliberately placed and worked out (again distance, relative angles at work).
-when you get less buzz when touching the guitar ground (bridge, jack, whatever), I think this is shielding effect at play. Your body is sort of a ground plane under the guitar electronics (and maybe the body to guitar circuit C is more effective because the circuitry is higher impedance?).
like loudthud mentioned with the Fender and relatively low gain, you can probably be more lax with things if gain (and bandwidth?) is lower(narrower) (and maybe if currents are low as in a battery operated efx pedal?). If you "do" high gain I would guess you'd probably have to execute things more technically correctly out of necessity.
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