I put together a stand alone reverb with a twist on tradition. Wanting to try something different and avoid the use of a 6V6, I lifted the 12AT7 reverb driver used in most Fender amps, and married that up with the split/mix arrangement of a 6G15 stand alone reverb. Surprisingly, it works better than I expected. I need to do some fine tuning, but there is plenty of dripping wet reverb available. The dwell, tone and mix controls work pretty well.
The issue I'm having is the dry signal drops quite a bit just going through the unit. It taps off the input of the first 12AX7, goes to a cathode follower and to the output via the mixer pot. All the research I've done says this is a common issue the the Fender 6G15 also.
The single triode section of the first 12AX7 provides enough gain to drive the dual 12AT7 sections. I read up on cathode followers and the most I one can get is unity gain (actually a tad less). I was thinking about using the extra triode section to bump up the dry signal a little before it hits the cathode follower to compensate for the loss of dry signal overall. Before I go to the trouble of adding that section in the chain I'd like to know if there is a better solution to this. I've read that the advantage of a cathode follower is the low impedance output, so I'm thinking it would be best to put the extra gain stage in front of the cathode follower. Am I missing anything obvious here?
The issue I'm having is the dry signal drops quite a bit just going through the unit. It taps off the input of the first 12AX7, goes to a cathode follower and to the output via the mixer pot. All the research I've done says this is a common issue the the Fender 6G15 also.
The single triode section of the first 12AX7 provides enough gain to drive the dual 12AT7 sections. I read up on cathode followers and the most I one can get is unity gain (actually a tad less). I was thinking about using the extra triode section to bump up the dry signal a little before it hits the cathode follower to compensate for the loss of dry signal overall. Before I go to the trouble of adding that section in the chain I'd like to know if there is a better solution to this. I've read that the advantage of a cathode follower is the low impedance output, so I'm thinking it would be best to put the extra gain stage in front of the cathode follower. Am I missing anything obvious here?
Comment