Originally posted by markr14850
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DC at the input, scratchy guitar volume pot
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Last edited by Silvio55; 06-03-2014, 04:42 AM.
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Originally posted by Silvio55 View PostWell, after reversing the bias cap my amp worked, but Iīm having this little problem now, my guitar volume pot is scratchy with this amp, so I looked for DC at the input of the amp and it was there, -0.8VDC in stand by and -0.3VDC with the amp on. I tried changing tubes but the problem is still there. What can be the problem? What should I check first?Experience is something you get, just after you really needed it.
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Sometimes when the supply voltage to the preamp tubes is set very low, they will start to draw grid current, and DC appears. But 215V is high enough that I wouldn't expect that to be the case here.
Your cathode voltage seems a bit low, which will have the bias set a bit hot. Is your cathode resistor the correct (measured) value?
If everything else about the amp is wonderful, maybe you could just try a .1uf film cap on the input to block the dc.
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Originally posted by eschertron View PostJust to add to the confusion, 0.8uA = 800nA
@OP on further notes:
Weird. I sure thought that if you're getting measurable voltage, it was leaking from the tube grid, as there isn't supposed to be anything else connected for it to come from.
DC back into the guitar for sure will make the guitar pots sound scratchy. I've seen a number of complaints about this, and fixing the DC fixed the scratchiness. Just not this odd form of DC.
I can tell you a fix, but it only fixes the symptom, not the underlying cause. String a 2.2M resistor across the tip and ring at the input jack. Change the grid leak resistor to 2.2M, and run a film capacitor between input jack tip and the grid. The cap blocks the DC, no scratchy guitar pot.
This bothers me, because it does not fix the problem, and now the leak can build up and cause issues with the tube and its amplification. But not knowing what is causing this, it might be OK.
It's probably worth a few minutes with a soldering iron.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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Originally posted by markr14850 View PostSometimes when the supply voltage to the preamp tubes is set very low, they will start to draw grid current, and DC appears. But 215V is high enough that I wouldn't expect that to be the case here.
Your cathode voltage seems a bit low, which will have the bias set a bit hot. Is your cathode resistor the correct (measured) value?
If everything else about the amp is wonderful, maybe you could just try a .1uf film cap on the input to block the dc.
Originally posted by R.G. View PostOh, sure - get the decimal point right just to make me look bad... It was the bane of my existence before calculators when all I had was a Log-Logf Duplex to get the decimal point in the right place. Now I can only blame doing math in my head.
@OP on further notes:
Weird. I sure thought that if you're getting measurable voltage, it was leaking from the tube grid, as there isn't supposed to be anything else connected for it to come from.
DC back into the guitar for sure will make the guitar pots sound scratchy. I've seen a number of complaints about this, and fixing the DC fixed the scratchiness. Just not this odd form of DC.
I can tell you a fix, but it only fixes the symptom, not the underlying cause. String a 2.2M resistor across the tip and ring at the input jack. Change the grid leak resistor to 2.2M, and run a film capacitor between input jack tip and the grid. The cap blocks the DC, no scratchy guitar pot.
This bothers me, because it does not fix the problem, and now the leak can build up and cause issues with the tube and its amplification. But not knowing what is causing this, it might be OK.
It's probably worth a few minutes with a soldering iron.
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Why are you connection the input directly without an input grid resistor?
Even Marshall used a cap on some models.
I had this problem with a Weber Tweed kit someone built.
It had input resistors, but still had dc out to the guitar.
Nothing I tried worked, so I think I gave up and used an input cap.
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Originally posted by drewl View PostWhy are you connection the input directly without an input grid resistor?
Even Marshall used a cap on some models.
I had this problem with a Weber Tweed kit someone built.
It had input resistors, but still had dc out to the guitar.
Nothing I tried worked, so I think I gave up and used an input cap.
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Originally posted by drewl View PostWhy are you connection the input directly without an input grid resistor?
Even Marshall used a cap on some models.
I had this problem with a Weber Tweed kit someone built.
It had input resistors, but still had dc out to the guitar.
Nothing I tried worked, so I think I gave up and used an input cap.
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Sounds like plain old grid leak to me. Charge from the cathode can build up on the grid, creating a small negative voltage. A input cap is not a "band aid", it is just the solution.
This phenomenon is the basis for grid-leak bias, which you can look up. Many older amps used this. ANy of those input stages where the cathode is directly grounded, and the grid resistor is VERY high, like 5 meg.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostSounds like plain old grid leak to me. Charge from the cathode can build up on the grid, creating a small negative voltage. A input cap is not a "band aid", it is just the solution.
This phenomenon is the basis for grid-leak bias, which you can look up. Many older amps used this. ANy of those input stages where the cathode is directly grounded, and the grid resistor is VERY high, like 5 meg.
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