When I last left here a month ago, I had a hum problem in my scratch-built Bassman. It was volume control dependent and definitely in the first preamp. Shielded cable and some ground mods did not help, so I decided to take out the eyelet board and the cap board and seriously rethink my grounding.
What transpired was a removal of the brass plate, the addition of a bus wire across the backs of the controls, the eyelet board ground and bus wire and preamp reservoir ground and phase splitter reservoir ground all grounded to the input jacks, and the bias supply ground connected to the main reservoir ground at the PT bolt. The result? No hum. Quiet as a church. And since I replaced the preamp plate carbon resistors with metal film resistors, I perceive the hiss to be a bit less. Whatever hum there is seems to be related to the guitar cable being connected. I can live with that.
So what's the problem, then? It 'thunks' when the standby switch is turned off. It's actually a 'thunk, squeal' kind of sound. It dies down quickly, but the amp didn't do that originally. It almost sounds like the amp wants to oscillate a little when the B+ is suddenly applied. Should I be concerned? I keep expecting the lid to blow off the cap doghouse each time I throw the switch. However, other than the presence pot not working (probably a bad solder job on the back of the pot -- it took a lot of heat to get the solder to stick) and the thunks, I'm pleased again.
In retrospect, I think the hum problem may have been the bias supply ground all along. I had it connected to the preamp ground originally.
Larry
What transpired was a removal of the brass plate, the addition of a bus wire across the backs of the controls, the eyelet board ground and bus wire and preamp reservoir ground and phase splitter reservoir ground all grounded to the input jacks, and the bias supply ground connected to the main reservoir ground at the PT bolt. The result? No hum. Quiet as a church. And since I replaced the preamp plate carbon resistors with metal film resistors, I perceive the hiss to be a bit less. Whatever hum there is seems to be related to the guitar cable being connected. I can live with that.
So what's the problem, then? It 'thunks' when the standby switch is turned off. It's actually a 'thunk, squeal' kind of sound. It dies down quickly, but the amp didn't do that originally. It almost sounds like the amp wants to oscillate a little when the B+ is suddenly applied. Should I be concerned? I keep expecting the lid to blow off the cap doghouse each time I throw the switch. However, other than the presence pot not working (probably a bad solder job on the back of the pot -- it took a lot of heat to get the solder to stick) and the thunks, I'm pleased again.
In retrospect, I think the hum problem may have been the bias supply ground all along. I had it connected to the preamp ground originally.
Larry
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