I have been plugging away on this Harmony 415. Fixed the trem, and installed a new cathode resistor as the bias was way hot. Wired it up with two 8-ohm speakers in parallel, 4-ohm load, as it came to me stock. It has what I can only assume is blocking distortion (I know... I'm still learning!) at even moderate levels of drive. With one of the speakers unhooked (now an 8-ohm load), it sounds much better, with only the faintest hint of this distortion at high levels of drive (guitar volume all the way up, strumming hard). I know I need to remove the chassis and check voltages etc. again, but today my back hurts, so... I turn to this forum with questions, hopefully I will get some replies that give me something to think about, and look for when I get it back apart. This amp has a pair of el84 in cathode bias. I originally did all my measurements and calculated the new cathode resistor with the amp idling into an 8-ohm load (it was handy). Was this a really wrong thing to do? And, if this IS a case of blocking distortion, does it make sense that I would see these symptoms in an amp such as this, when I change the speaker load? BTW, it is NOT a bad speaker, I have eliminated that, and the results are the same also with a different pair of output tubes. Just wondering if my situation rings any bells with anyone.
EDIT: the amp sounded great into my test speaker, which is a Celestion vintage 10... otherwise I wouldn't have put it back together! And please forgive me for sounding like a totally disorganized newb, in many ways I am! But I spend a lot of time here reading, and I am slowly getting my bench together, and learning more organized testing procedures as I go, with each project. Just wanna say thanks to everyone here for making this forum the awesome place that it is! I am learning so much here. This amp is on the verge of being an absolutely awesome thing to plug a Telecaster into, just wish it were mine!
EDIT: the amp sounded great into my test speaker, which is a Celestion vintage 10... otherwise I wouldn't have put it back together! And please forgive me for sounding like a totally disorganized newb, in many ways I am! But I spend a lot of time here reading, and I am slowly getting my bench together, and learning more organized testing procedures as I go, with each project. Just wanna say thanks to everyone here for making this forum the awesome place that it is! I am learning so much here. This amp is on the verge of being an absolutely awesome thing to plug a Telecaster into, just wish it were mine!
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