In the process of listening to a fresh restoration of my 44 yr old Traynor YBA-1A, before making any major moves in mod’s, I found myself puzzling over why the input cap value to the Phase Inverter stage is 1/5 the value to that on the Feedback side of the PI stage. I went and looked at Ampeg’s, Fenders, some Mesa amps, Orange, Vox amps and others.
All the Fender amps I looked at were at least 1/5 the value or way smaller. Some Ampegs were the same value, others 1/10, some Mesa amps were 1/5 the value, others were the same value. The Vox amps I looked at also the same value, Orange Amps were 1/2 the value. I didn’t spend a lot of time looking.
The main reason I can see is that input cap’s value (to the PI stage) sets the LF corner of the power amps’ frequency response, and you’d set it high enough so you don’t drive the output transformer into hard saturation at low frequency, while still having good low frequency response. Guitar amps will usually be set an octave higher than bass amps. If you have the budget in manufacturing for a really good output transformer with full power @ 30Hz before it folds up, you can set the LF corner lower than a cheaper OT.
The OT on the Traynor YBA-1A isn’t what I’d call huge. It’s a 50W amp, and will produce 50W into 8 ohms @ 1% THD, which is the onset of transformer saturation @ 30Hz. I haven’t fully characterized the OT yet, but the non-linearity curve begins ascending rapidly below that, and the tubes are at visible clip (EL-34's).
The -3dB LF corner is 63Hz with the stock values (22nF), while changing to 100nF dropped it to 34Hz, an octave lower. I gave a listen to it, and liked the change, giving a deeper bass response. At real high levels with my 5-string Fender Jazz, that might be another story. I’m still on the fence with this OT for use with KT-88’s and a separate screen supply for them.
All the Fender amps I looked at were at least 1/5 the value or way smaller. Some Ampegs were the same value, others 1/10, some Mesa amps were 1/5 the value, others were the same value. The Vox amps I looked at also the same value, Orange Amps were 1/2 the value. I didn’t spend a lot of time looking.
The main reason I can see is that input cap’s value (to the PI stage) sets the LF corner of the power amps’ frequency response, and you’d set it high enough so you don’t drive the output transformer into hard saturation at low frequency, while still having good low frequency response. Guitar amps will usually be set an octave higher than bass amps. If you have the budget in manufacturing for a really good output transformer with full power @ 30Hz before it folds up, you can set the LF corner lower than a cheaper OT.
The OT on the Traynor YBA-1A isn’t what I’d call huge. It’s a 50W amp, and will produce 50W into 8 ohms @ 1% THD, which is the onset of transformer saturation @ 30Hz. I haven’t fully characterized the OT yet, but the non-linearity curve begins ascending rapidly below that, and the tubes are at visible clip (EL-34's).
The -3dB LF corner is 63Hz with the stock values (22nF), while changing to 100nF dropped it to 34Hz, an octave lower. I gave a listen to it, and liked the change, giving a deeper bass response. At real high levels with my 5-string Fender Jazz, that might be another story. I’m still on the fence with this OT for use with KT-88’s and a separate screen supply for them.
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