Hi, I re-wiring my own 5F6A clone and now it has a very low volume. What could cause the problem?
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5F6A low volume
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Originally posted by vinceg View PostPossible. Thank you for the tip. One thing to watch tomorrow with the light of day. Italy is now evening.
This could be the cause?
nosajsoldering stuff that's broken, breaking stuff that works, Yeah!
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Originally posted by nosaj View PostAlso since you used Dale resistors, we can't tell what the values are. Sometimes a wrong resistor value in certain position can choke the volume. It will be up to you to verify each one against the schematic or layout.
nosaj
Anyway, it seems strange to me that the amp does not have a back hiss. I noticed that without guitar plug in there is not classical valve hiss, even raising volume control. Could it be a problem in V1 preamp section?
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Originally posted by vinceg View PostI will also control the values of the resistors. Although I doubt they are wrong. Unless Mouser did not make a mistake.
Anyway, it seems strange to me that the amp does not have a back hiss. I noticed that without guitar plug in there is not classical valve hiss, even raising volume control. Could it be a problem in V1 preamp section?
See this on page 47 the click test. http://theguitar-blog.com/wp-content...r-Handbook.pdf
nosajsoldering stuff that's broken, breaking stuff that works, Yeah!
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Just curious, did it work properly before the Mods?
Personally I have found that by far the best Mod, the one which brings smiles to users, is to rip all of them off and return amp to original circuit, go figure.
Not kidding: amps become Classics for a reason: they provide better sound than others since forever, and peak sound and performance was reached after extensive , ear tested modding ... 50 years ago.
Once at the peak of the mountain, all paths lead downwardsJuan Manuel Fahey
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If an amp was working, then you do something to it, and it no longer works right, it is a safe bet the work you did was the cause. SO look especially at every part you changed, every joint you soldered.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostJust curious, did it work properly before the Mods?
Personally I have found that by far the best Mod, the one which brings smiles to users, is to rip all of them off and return amp to original circuit, go figure.
Not kidding: amps become Classics for a reason: they provide better sound than others since forever, and peak sound and performance was reached after extensive , ear tested modding ... 50 years ago.
Once at the peak of the mountain, all paths lead downwards
However, this night I had a flash of inspiration: I forgot to solder the feedback resistor at the output. I can not wait to run into the lab to see if this is the cause of the problem.
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Update
I realized I forgot to solder feedback resistor to out. Unfortunately I do not think was the problem. Now the amp has right volume but sometimes it disappears. It also seems to produce some sort of oscillation when I increase the volume control and it has background noise.
these are the values I have read:
Power transformer has 325+325 V AC than it is correct. At B+ there is 411V DC.
V5 (6L6)
pin3 400
pin4 413
pin5 -40
pin6 404
V4 (6L6)
pin3 400
pin4 400
pin5 -40
pin6 407
V3 (12ax7)
pin1 233
pin3 41
pin6 236
pin8 41.5
V2 (12ax7)
pin1 170
pin3 1.1
pin6 310
pin8 167
V1 (12ay7)
pin1 152
pin3 2.3
pin6 153
pin8 2.3
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Originally posted by vinceg View PostYes, it worked well. I just decided to change the resistors and capacitors and improve the wiring. The mods concern only the bias circuit.
However, this night I had a flash of inspiration: I forgot to solder the feedback resistor at the output. I can not wait to run into the lab to see if this is the cause of the problem.
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