Thanks everyone!! Oh boy, well, I've done a bunch of reading, some from musicians, and some articles like Aiken's and Merlin's sites and the one consistent complaint about blackface circuits was blocking distortion when you turn up the bass, and then turn up the volume. Most of them said "just turn the bass down".
One even said "WHY would you turn the bass up that high, you know it will sound lousy" referring to blocking. I wrote Aiken and Merlin emails asked questions a bout blocking. Aiken says that the combination of smaller ohm or no grid stop resistors and larger coupling caps in the blackface Fenders cause the problem to a much greater extent than say the marshalls, that used much smaller coupling caps, had earlier preamp stages that rolled off the bass a lot more, and had bigger grid stops (which some of you wrote above about coupling caps). So, what could I do without changing the tone TOO much, the suggestions were to first add grid stops on the back half of the preamp tubes (after the tone stack), and up the value of the stop on the output tubes. If this wasn't enough, then add grid stops on the phase inverter and reduce the coupling cap on the down side of the phase inverter. Some of this will change the tone of the amp, ok, agreed. But funny that if there is too much blocking distortion, you can't turn up the bass anyway, so ... I guess id rather have the amp as close to designed as possible, but reduce the blocking without going too far. I like to play with a wide variety of settings on the amp, if turning up the bass kills he thing with blocking Id like to reduce that. Merlin and Aiken both suggested 100k grid stops in earlier stages to reduce blocking, but this really does increase audible Johnson noise, but only seems to be a big problem at volume 8 or 9 and I won't go that high.
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