The amp in question is a Silverface Fender Princeton Reverb made in the early 70s. Fender has done an admirable job of confusing Tremolo and Vibrato in the public's mind but were talking about tremolo here, amplitude modulation. The circuit in question is the stock tremolo circuit used at the time the amp was built. The only mod was to lessen a 1 meg resistor to about 470K to intensify and deepen the tremolo. It's a very common mod for this tremolo circuit. This is not an opto-isolator circuit as seen in other Fender amps of this time (and before and after). It's not my amp but my friend's. I was repairing, updating a few small things. The amp is very close to stock; I may have tweaked a tone stack cap or two and added screen grid resistors and a 3-prong AC cord to the amp. None of these thing will affect the tremolo problem I'm experiencing.
Here's the problem: The tremolo is barely but perceptibly 'on' when the intensity pot is on zero (fully counter-clockwise). The Princeton/Princeton Reverb tremolo circuit is always active, unless turned off by a footswitch or the use of a dummy plug, unlike the Fender opto-isolator circuit which works opposite (always off, unless…). But normally, you can defeat and eliminate the tremolo by keeping the Intensity pot on zero.
So what have I done so far to attempt to eliminate this feint tremolo always on problem? I checked all grounds in and around the tremolo circuit. Then I double-checked them. Then I measured the intensity pot of the tremolo circuit, both in and out of the circuit. I checked the fully counter-clockwise resistance to ground to make sure it wasn't too high or differing at all from other pots of the same value/taper. It wasn't. Still, no change. Then I subbed in a new pot. No change. I measured every resistor in the circuit and changed out any that weren't a close tolerance. I re-installed the 1 Meg resistor that controls the tremolo depth. No change. I changed out every capacitor in the tremolo circuit. Again, no change. So I'm a bit stuck on this one. Yes, I can get rid of the very feint tremolo by using the dummy plug on the rear panel RCA jack but that's not what my friend wants. This isn't a problem at all in the other 5~6 Princeton/Princeton Reverb amps that I own, only this amp.
My questions are: has anyone else experienced this problem before and if so, how did you solve it. And what should I try next?
Thanks for reading this and hopefully contributing,
Bob M.
Here's the problem: The tremolo is barely but perceptibly 'on' when the intensity pot is on zero (fully counter-clockwise). The Princeton/Princeton Reverb tremolo circuit is always active, unless turned off by a footswitch or the use of a dummy plug, unlike the Fender opto-isolator circuit which works opposite (always off, unless…). But normally, you can defeat and eliminate the tremolo by keeping the Intensity pot on zero.
So what have I done so far to attempt to eliminate this feint tremolo always on problem? I checked all grounds in and around the tremolo circuit. Then I double-checked them. Then I measured the intensity pot of the tremolo circuit, both in and out of the circuit. I checked the fully counter-clockwise resistance to ground to make sure it wasn't too high or differing at all from other pots of the same value/taper. It wasn't. Still, no change. Then I subbed in a new pot. No change. I measured every resistor in the circuit and changed out any that weren't a close tolerance. I re-installed the 1 Meg resistor that controls the tremolo depth. No change. I changed out every capacitor in the tremolo circuit. Again, no change. So I'm a bit stuck on this one. Yes, I can get rid of the very feint tremolo by using the dummy plug on the rear panel RCA jack but that's not what my friend wants. This isn't a problem at all in the other 5~6 Princeton/Princeton Reverb amps that I own, only this amp.
My questions are: has anyone else experienced this problem before and if so, how did you solve it. And what should I try next?
Thanks for reading this and hopefully contributing,
Bob M.
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