I have made a few mods to an Ampeg Gemini-2 G-15 Amplifier. I took out the vibrato circuitry, as well as the 'clean' preamp channel, and modded the reverb, all in an effort to simplify the amplifier and reduce noise by removing unused items.
(This amp now has 12AX7 preamp (follower-cascode), 12AX7 reverb (1/2 driver, 1/2 recovery), 6U8A booster/splitter (follower-cascode w/triode phase splitter), and a pair of JJ-7591S in push-pull)
All is going fairly well, and I have succeeded at making a few tweaks along the way to get the tone to be pretty nice in the clean range, and well-balanced reverb and much less idle noise than before.
For some reason, however, I am now having an odd problem when the amp goes up into the overdrive range. It goes from clean to overdrive much earlier than it used to at equivalent bias current, and one of the tubes gets hot (glows) along with the strumming while the other one remains constant or even cools off a bit if the volume is very loud. Also, the tone is shot, it is muddy overdrive and it is hollow (likely due to heavy push-pull phase imbalance).
I have done the following to troubleshoot:
1) swapped the push and pull tubes
2) swapped OT primaries
3) swapped cathode and anode following connections coming out of the 6U8A splitter tube.
The hot tube is always the one hooked up to the 6U8A anode output (push?), and the constant/colder tube is hooked up to the cathode (pull?).
So I don't think there is a problem with the OT (it ohms out okay too), nor with one of the 7591's. The problem occurs after trying several different 6U8's, and is more pronounced the higher the bias current is set.
I have done some testing with a DC volt meter at idle, and while strumming the guitar. The output from the splitter seems oddly asymmetric. I have attached a schematic. (Note: stock, the splitter triode has 55V cathode, 20V grid, 260V anode, with B4=320V. Also for 7591 stock B1=430V and bias is 40mA per tube but for the old style 7591's in the GT envelope). There is not a bad connection with my grid bias resistors, I have tested thoroughly, but oddly, the grid is always at 0V on the 6U8.
I appreciate any help in getting this circuit to operate in a more balanced fashion, and any pointers in making it more stable and less muddy sounding.
(This amp now has 12AX7 preamp (follower-cascode), 12AX7 reverb (1/2 driver, 1/2 recovery), 6U8A booster/splitter (follower-cascode w/triode phase splitter), and a pair of JJ-7591S in push-pull)
All is going fairly well, and I have succeeded at making a few tweaks along the way to get the tone to be pretty nice in the clean range, and well-balanced reverb and much less idle noise than before.
For some reason, however, I am now having an odd problem when the amp goes up into the overdrive range. It goes from clean to overdrive much earlier than it used to at equivalent bias current, and one of the tubes gets hot (glows) along with the strumming while the other one remains constant or even cools off a bit if the volume is very loud. Also, the tone is shot, it is muddy overdrive and it is hollow (likely due to heavy push-pull phase imbalance).
I have done the following to troubleshoot:
1) swapped the push and pull tubes
2) swapped OT primaries
3) swapped cathode and anode following connections coming out of the 6U8A splitter tube.
The hot tube is always the one hooked up to the 6U8A anode output (push?), and the constant/colder tube is hooked up to the cathode (pull?).
So I don't think there is a problem with the OT (it ohms out okay too), nor with one of the 7591's. The problem occurs after trying several different 6U8's, and is more pronounced the higher the bias current is set.
I have done some testing with a DC volt meter at idle, and while strumming the guitar. The output from the splitter seems oddly asymmetric. I have attached a schematic. (Note: stock, the splitter triode has 55V cathode, 20V grid, 260V anode, with B4=320V. Also for 7591 stock B1=430V and bias is 40mA per tube but for the old style 7591's in the GT envelope). There is not a bad connection with my grid bias resistors, I have tested thoroughly, but oddly, the grid is always at 0V on the 6U8.
I appreciate any help in getting this circuit to operate in a more balanced fashion, and any pointers in making it more stable and less muddy sounding.
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