Howdy all,
I have been chasing a problem in a scratch-build I've recently finished. I seem to have the problem sort of narrowed down, but not in a way that makes any sense to me. If I plug in and play at low to moderate volume, no problem. As soon as I play loud (volume knob at 5 or so through either channel) there is a nasty distortion/pop/crackle sort of sound that lasts for about the duration of a hard strum, in other words a pretty short time. Because the two channels have only the driver and power tubes in common, I've been looking there. Adjusting the bias up or down appears to have no effect. I have replaced plate resistors for the driver and the coupling caps between the driver and the power tubes. Here's the exciting part: the problem goes away completely if I have an ammeter (analog, I haven't tried it with a digital one) in line with either power tube, in other words in series with pin 8, which goes straight to ground on this amp. I see that the ammeter measures about 4 ohms. Does this make any more sense to any of you than it does to me? Thanks, and happy nearly new year!
I have been chasing a problem in a scratch-build I've recently finished. I seem to have the problem sort of narrowed down, but not in a way that makes any sense to me. If I plug in and play at low to moderate volume, no problem. As soon as I play loud (volume knob at 5 or so through either channel) there is a nasty distortion/pop/crackle sort of sound that lasts for about the duration of a hard strum, in other words a pretty short time. Because the two channels have only the driver and power tubes in common, I've been looking there. Adjusting the bias up or down appears to have no effect. I have replaced plate resistors for the driver and the coupling caps between the driver and the power tubes. Here's the exciting part: the problem goes away completely if I have an ammeter (analog, I haven't tried it with a digital one) in line with either power tube, in other words in series with pin 8, which goes straight to ground on this amp. I see that the ammeter measures about 4 ohms. Does this make any more sense to any of you than it does to me? Thanks, and happy nearly new year!
Comment