Hello,
I would be grateful for some advice as a newbie.
I completed my first amp, a 5E3, last June. It was a kit from ampwares. I studied up and did my best, following Fender's layout, grounding the chassis, and pots..
It was fairly loud, broke up typically fairly early, and had a little hum.
I decided to rewire for a standby switch, and for the hum, star grounding plus twisted filament wiring.
But then things got worse.. and since I have tried many things.
Currently it has star grounding for the PT center tap, cathode and phase inventer(?) to the PT bolt. The preamp and pots are grounded per a bus to a bolt on the other side. However the jacks and pots are not isolated.
In June, I did not bring the amp up as an experienced tech would. I simply turned it on/off a few times. At first I had no sound but that was because of a bad solder connection on one of the power tubes.
The thing to note is that the first day when I was bringing it up, there was one time when a small puff of smoke came up near the power tubes area. It wasn't much, and I saw no sign that the caps were split, and thereafter the amp sounded good and loud, so I ignored it... (cold solder joint that's working out?)
I had some trouble soldering grounds to the chassis (per Fender) and brass plate - for example the .0047 cap, and sometimes had to resolder them. Otherwise the amp sounded great. That's another reason I felt I had to change to star grounding.
To reduce hum I added the 100 ohm resistors to the filament wiring to create a center type on the power tube cathode. That reduced hum a bit, but the buzz is still there. On the preamp side, the twisted filament wiring is as far out of the way as possible, however it hovers above the power tubes.
Because of the smoke (above) I assumed that there was an issue with the 1st cap and replaced it. No difference.
I've measured all resistors and they seem OK. Solder joints look good to my untrained eye. I've pushed things around with chopsticks - nothing dramatic.
The experience -
With volume off, there is almost no hum. When volume is up to ~2, there's a buzz. By moving my hand above the preamp or pots, the buzz intensifies. If I touch the chassis, it goes away. If I hold the chassis in my hand, it disappears completely.
If I plug a guitar in, the buzz changes, reduces a bit. If I touch the strings, the buzz gets very quiet. (But while playing, if I take my hand off the strings, the buzz noise is noticeable.)
Note that I live in Paris, France and use a step-down PT, 220 - 110 V. I measured it at 119 V actually.
The filaments are running at 6.3 V.
Other voltages -
off rectifier 422 V, after 5100 resistor 345 V, after 22k resistor 248 V, V2 pin 6 196 V, V2 pin 1 165 V, V1 pin 6 126 V, V1 pin 1 123 V.
The tubes are Sovtec. I have some other NOS but I believe the Sovtec 5Y3GT is giving a high voltage (422 V) and so am sticking with the Sovtec for now. I have some NOS RCA 5Y3GT tubes on the way.
With this amp I've learned a lot but please don't assume I understand all terms. Anyway I'll ask if I don't.
Thanks for your time reading this and appreciate any advise.
Best regards, Paul
I would be grateful for some advice as a newbie.
I completed my first amp, a 5E3, last June. It was a kit from ampwares. I studied up and did my best, following Fender's layout, grounding the chassis, and pots..
It was fairly loud, broke up typically fairly early, and had a little hum.
I decided to rewire for a standby switch, and for the hum, star grounding plus twisted filament wiring.
But then things got worse.. and since I have tried many things.
Currently it has star grounding for the PT center tap, cathode and phase inventer(?) to the PT bolt. The preamp and pots are grounded per a bus to a bolt on the other side. However the jacks and pots are not isolated.
In June, I did not bring the amp up as an experienced tech would. I simply turned it on/off a few times. At first I had no sound but that was because of a bad solder connection on one of the power tubes.
The thing to note is that the first day when I was bringing it up, there was one time when a small puff of smoke came up near the power tubes area. It wasn't much, and I saw no sign that the caps were split, and thereafter the amp sounded good and loud, so I ignored it... (cold solder joint that's working out?)
I had some trouble soldering grounds to the chassis (per Fender) and brass plate - for example the .0047 cap, and sometimes had to resolder them. Otherwise the amp sounded great. That's another reason I felt I had to change to star grounding.
To reduce hum I added the 100 ohm resistors to the filament wiring to create a center type on the power tube cathode. That reduced hum a bit, but the buzz is still there. On the preamp side, the twisted filament wiring is as far out of the way as possible, however it hovers above the power tubes.
Because of the smoke (above) I assumed that there was an issue with the 1st cap and replaced it. No difference.
I've measured all resistors and they seem OK. Solder joints look good to my untrained eye. I've pushed things around with chopsticks - nothing dramatic.
The experience -
With volume off, there is almost no hum. When volume is up to ~2, there's a buzz. By moving my hand above the preamp or pots, the buzz intensifies. If I touch the chassis, it goes away. If I hold the chassis in my hand, it disappears completely.
If I plug a guitar in, the buzz changes, reduces a bit. If I touch the strings, the buzz gets very quiet. (But while playing, if I take my hand off the strings, the buzz noise is noticeable.)
Note that I live in Paris, France and use a step-down PT, 220 - 110 V. I measured it at 119 V actually.
The filaments are running at 6.3 V.
Other voltages -
off rectifier 422 V, after 5100 resistor 345 V, after 22k resistor 248 V, V2 pin 6 196 V, V2 pin 1 165 V, V1 pin 6 126 V, V1 pin 1 123 V.
The tubes are Sovtec. I have some other NOS but I believe the Sovtec 5Y3GT is giving a high voltage (422 V) and so am sticking with the Sovtec for now. I have some NOS RCA 5Y3GT tubes on the way.
With this amp I've learned a lot but please don't assume I understand all terms. Anyway I'll ask if I don't.
Thanks for your time reading this and appreciate any advise.
Best regards, Paul
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