Tested today with the junction of C13 and R15 grounded with a jumper, the 100R is in place and the amp connected to a speaker cab.
Without the ground jumper the hum is there, with the ground jumper connected most of the hum is gone. There is a very slight hum from the speaker. With the PI pulled there is a very slight hum from the speaker but barely noticeable.
Also tried a couple of other things, not sure if they will help.
The 100R for right now is connected to a switch, it makes it easier than disconnecting and reconnecting when asked to do so. With the junction of C13 and R15 grounded and the 100R in circuit as stated the hum is almost gone but no completely. If I take the 100R out of circuit with the switch and the jumper in place any hum if there is any is masked due to the amp starts to pulsate, motorboats.
With regards to the difference in gain I did the following rather than relying on my ears.
With the ground jumper disconnected, I connected the oscilloscope to a dummy load on the speaker jack, set the scope to .5mv per division and set the amp volume to 4, all tone controls are set to the center position. Connected the small oscillator to the input jack, set it to a 1K signal and turned the amplitude up until the trace was covering 5 divisions peak to peak. When the jumper is reconnected the trace goes flat so there is no output with the C13 and R15 grounded.
Sorry for the confusion.
One further test with the oscilloscope without C13 an R15 grounded. No changes made to the amp, the oscillator or the oscilloscope settings. I had mentioned in a previous post about a volume difference with the 100R connected and disconnected. What the scope shows, if I did it correctly. With the 100R in circuit the trace is at 5 divisions peak to peak, with the 100R lifted by the switch the trace drops to almost exactly 1 division peak to peak.
Without the ground jumper the hum is there, with the ground jumper connected most of the hum is gone. There is a very slight hum from the speaker. With the PI pulled there is a very slight hum from the speaker but barely noticeable.
Also tried a couple of other things, not sure if they will help.
The 100R for right now is connected to a switch, it makes it easier than disconnecting and reconnecting when asked to do so. With the junction of C13 and R15 grounded and the 100R in circuit as stated the hum is almost gone but no completely. If I take the 100R out of circuit with the switch and the jumper in place any hum if there is any is masked due to the amp starts to pulsate, motorboats.
With regards to the difference in gain I did the following rather than relying on my ears.
With the ground jumper disconnected, I connected the oscilloscope to a dummy load on the speaker jack, set the scope to .5mv per division and set the amp volume to 4, all tone controls are set to the center position. Connected the small oscillator to the input jack, set it to a 1K signal and turned the amplitude up until the trace was covering 5 divisions peak to peak. When the jumper is reconnected the trace goes flat so there is no output with the C13 and R15 grounded.
Sorry for the confusion.
One further test with the oscilloscope without C13 an R15 grounded. No changes made to the amp, the oscillator or the oscilloscope settings. I had mentioned in a previous post about a volume difference with the 100R connected and disconnected. What the scope shows, if I did it correctly. With the 100R in circuit the trace is at 5 divisions peak to peak, with the 100R lifted by the switch the trace drops to almost exactly 1 division peak to peak.
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