I've built a one channel version (Bass channel only) of the AA864 Fender Bassman. I am in the debugging phase now, and have a great deal of hum. The hum seems to have both 60hZ and 120hZ components to it, so it is not clear as to the cause.
I've eliminated the deep switch for now, and although my plan is to eventually have a mid pot and a treble boost switch, neither is in the circuit at this time. Also, since there is one channel only, I have the second 220K mixing resistor going to ground.
In my troubleshooting, what I have done is to pull the small tubes from back to front, and the hum goes away regardless of which tube I pull. This seems to tell me that V1 is where the hum is because if the hum were in any other position, pulling tubes in front of that position should have no impact. To further confirm this result, when I lifted the .1uF coupling cap that connects V1b's plate to the 220K resistor that ultimately leads to V2b's grid (or just grounded at the plate side of that cap), the noise goes away totally. Frankly the amp is quite silent at that point.
So, first dumb question. Does this definitely mean that the hum is entering in or around V1 and the tone stack?
Note, another troubleshooting step I took was to leave that .1uF cap connected, but to ground the plate of V1a. This made very little difference in the hum, leading me to believe that V1a is not contributing much hum, and neither are the input jacks as they sit in front of V1a.
So second dumb question - am I correct that this further narrows the hunt to the tone stack and V1b?
Assuming that the problem is definitely in that area, I am wondering if my problem could be related to placement of my bias pot or of the OT with respect to the preamp circuit? My bias pot is fairly close to the treble pot. On the other hand, Fender's layout put the bias pot near the tone stack of the normal channel, so maybe that is totally safe???? As for the OT, it is under the middle of my preamp board, which puts it somewhat close to the cathode components (caps and resistors) of V1. Could that be a problem?
I'll post some photos soon. As I have been trouble shooting, the flying leads are starting to look a little worse for wear, but I will replace wires later after the amp is working properly.
Any and all help is welcome - this is very frustrating as you can imagine.
bassman_aa864_schem - bass channel only.pdf
I've eliminated the deep switch for now, and although my plan is to eventually have a mid pot and a treble boost switch, neither is in the circuit at this time. Also, since there is one channel only, I have the second 220K mixing resistor going to ground.
In my troubleshooting, what I have done is to pull the small tubes from back to front, and the hum goes away regardless of which tube I pull. This seems to tell me that V1 is where the hum is because if the hum were in any other position, pulling tubes in front of that position should have no impact. To further confirm this result, when I lifted the .1uF coupling cap that connects V1b's plate to the 220K resistor that ultimately leads to V2b's grid (or just grounded at the plate side of that cap), the noise goes away totally. Frankly the amp is quite silent at that point.
So, first dumb question. Does this definitely mean that the hum is entering in or around V1 and the tone stack?
Note, another troubleshooting step I took was to leave that .1uF cap connected, but to ground the plate of V1a. This made very little difference in the hum, leading me to believe that V1a is not contributing much hum, and neither are the input jacks as they sit in front of V1a.
So second dumb question - am I correct that this further narrows the hunt to the tone stack and V1b?
Assuming that the problem is definitely in that area, I am wondering if my problem could be related to placement of my bias pot or of the OT with respect to the preamp circuit? My bias pot is fairly close to the treble pot. On the other hand, Fender's layout put the bias pot near the tone stack of the normal channel, so maybe that is totally safe???? As for the OT, it is under the middle of my preamp board, which puts it somewhat close to the cathode components (caps and resistors) of V1. Could that be a problem?
I'll post some photos soon. As I have been trouble shooting, the flying leads are starting to look a little worse for wear, but I will replace wires later after the amp is working properly.
Any and all help is welcome - this is very frustrating as you can imagine.
bassman_aa864_schem - bass channel only.pdf
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