Just a report in case it can help someone (and a nod to using a scope - WITH proper loading...)
I was presented with a Fender Blues Jr that reportedly had a distortion-on-decay issue. Well - I eventually agreed that it did. Man - that symptom was subtle (for my 50+ Yr-old-rock-guitar-player ears anyway). After I played it for about 15 minutes I DID FINALLY start to notice a quick "BRRZZZZ" (like that?) at a VERY low level following the attack & during the decay of a note, most noticeable at higher (guitar) frequencies like G @ 12th fret and disappearing almost as quickly as it appeared.
I tried the leasyl stuff at first: Ran it into an external cab with same results, tapped/poked/prodded tubes, PCB & all manner of other components, used a guitar and/or a signal generator for input.
Eventually (since I was listening anyway) I put the scope probe on the output while it was still hooked to my test speaker with a 1KHz square wave input and immediately noticed a HF oscillation on the positive side of the waveform at lower levels. I then switched to a resistive dummy load and the artifact was gone! There was lesson/reminder #1 for me: a dummy load is NOT THE SAME as a speaker load in many ways. OK hope I remember...
Lesson #2 was that I probably would NEVER have homed in on the problem without a scope, AND a real speaker load. Dammit - when am I going to get out of school and start earning a real living...?
A little prodding/probing/moving stuff around with a chopstick revealed the most reactive components to be the wiring in the vicinity of the OT primaries. Clipping the (very neat but too numerous) cable ties and moving the wires around got rid of the basic problem, but there was STILL a hint of oscillation visible on the scope.
OK to wrap up: I desoldered the ribbon-cable conductors which carried the power tube plate connections from the main PCB at the tube PCB and clipped the conductors at the tube PCB to eliminate any signal path. I then clipped off the QD terminals from the OT P-P primary wires and soldered them directly to the tube socket PCB pins at pin-7 of each of the EL84 power tubes. Result - problem solved!
Hope this helps someone sometime...
Mark
I was presented with a Fender Blues Jr that reportedly had a distortion-on-decay issue. Well - I eventually agreed that it did. Man - that symptom was subtle (for my 50+ Yr-old-rock-guitar-player ears anyway). After I played it for about 15 minutes I DID FINALLY start to notice a quick "BRRZZZZ" (like that?) at a VERY low level following the attack & during the decay of a note, most noticeable at higher (guitar) frequencies like G @ 12th fret and disappearing almost as quickly as it appeared.
I tried the leasyl stuff at first: Ran it into an external cab with same results, tapped/poked/prodded tubes, PCB & all manner of other components, used a guitar and/or a signal generator for input.
Eventually (since I was listening anyway) I put the scope probe on the output while it was still hooked to my test speaker with a 1KHz square wave input and immediately noticed a HF oscillation on the positive side of the waveform at lower levels. I then switched to a resistive dummy load and the artifact was gone! There was lesson/reminder #1 for me: a dummy load is NOT THE SAME as a speaker load in many ways. OK hope I remember...
Lesson #2 was that I probably would NEVER have homed in on the problem without a scope, AND a real speaker load. Dammit - when am I going to get out of school and start earning a real living...?
A little prodding/probing/moving stuff around with a chopstick revealed the most reactive components to be the wiring in the vicinity of the OT primaries. Clipping the (very neat but too numerous) cable ties and moving the wires around got rid of the basic problem, but there was STILL a hint of oscillation visible on the scope.
OK to wrap up: I desoldered the ribbon-cable conductors which carried the power tube plate connections from the main PCB at the tube PCB and clipped the conductors at the tube PCB to eliminate any signal path. I then clipped off the QD terminals from the OT P-P primary wires and soldered them directly to the tube socket PCB pins at pin-7 of each of the EL84 power tubes. Result - problem solved!
Hope this helps someone sometime...
Mark
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