OK, so I have the chirps in a '67 Bandmaster. I researched the topic and found this:
Vintage Amps Bulletin Board • View topic - Vibrato "chirping"
When I went to try it I grabbed a .047uF by accident. It silenced the chirp but cut out the vibrato completely. The closest I have to a .01uF is a .02uF so I used that and now the chirp is silent and I have the vibrato effect. It does seem a little more subtle than what I'm used to from a Fender vibe but certainly usuable.
What I'm curious about is if I put in a .01uF will the effect be just a little more pronounced? And what is exactly going on here with this cap, what is it doing to fix the chirp and to diminish the effect when the value used is too high?
The solution calls for adding one capacitor and dressing the leads: Connect a 0.01 mf 600 volt mylar capacitor from the junction of the 10 megohm resistor (where it connects to the neon lamp on the eyelet board) to ground (where the LDR connects to ground also on the eyelet board). Dress the leads to the vibrato speed and intensity controls away from the tone controls and filter leads. Bunch together the leads connecting the components on the eyelet board to the tube socket of the 12AX7 vibrato tube.
When I went to try it I grabbed a .047uF by accident. It silenced the chirp but cut out the vibrato completely. The closest I have to a .01uF is a .02uF so I used that and now the chirp is silent and I have the vibrato effect. It does seem a little more subtle than what I'm used to from a Fender vibe but certainly usuable.
What I'm curious about is if I put in a .01uF will the effect be just a little more pronounced? And what is exactly going on here with this cap, what is it doing to fix the chirp and to diminish the effect when the value used is too high?
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