I am building an Ampeg SB-12 clone bass amplifier (2- 12ax7 + 2 - 6L6GC) on an old Rowe chassis, with a couple differences. First, I'm using full-wave recto rather than tube; and second, the bias supply is provided by a single (yellow) tap w/ half-wave neg recto followed by a 3k3 in series then 100uf electrolytic to ground paralleled by (at the moment) a 200k resistor, with 270k's going to the grids per schematic. I know the dropping resistor seems large but it is how I am able to generate -53.5v on the output grids. It also drives the plate voltage up to near the 475 mark that the schem calls for. So maybe there's a better way to get enough bias voltage? That's issue #1.
The second issue is baffling me, but I think has to do with the phase inverter. With the treble pot almost at minimum or almost at max, the output current drops pretty significantly (say by 12-13ma)and the amp is underbiased but sounds pretty good. With the treble anywhere else in its range the current jumps to about the right level, but the sound is very distorted. I have switched out the baxandall treble caps and the treble pot, verified the V2 cathode resistor and tried to find any leakage in the V1 coupling caps, without joy.
Any suggestions where I could look for the problem?
The schematic is good except I didn't include the "bright" input, and the bias supply is as described above.
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