Hi guys,
I usually haunt the pickup-making part of this board...I have a pretty limited knowledge of the physiology of amps & their various pathologies, but that's something I want to get a bit more into, being the only guy in my bands who takes a soldering iron on tour and is expected to fix everything from dislocated shoulders to Fender Twins smoking ominously from the back.
I recently bought what turned out to be a really nice, well-kept vintage Vox Venue Lead 100 after becoming tired with changing tubes every other month. It is a solid state amp but the crunch that comes out of it stupidly sweet. I only went to check it out in this guy's garage but ended up taking it home as it felt as solid as a tank.
Anyway, the one issue with it is the spring reverb. It is barely audible, even with the pot on 10. I do have a few reverb pedals, but being more a straight-into-the-amp type of guy with an unhealthy tendency to crank the verb all the way up, I thought I'd give a try at sorting it out. The problem is that there is very little info about this amp on the internet, and there's very little way to tell if that 'verb was designed to be very discrete or if there is any kind of malfunction at work here. The one thing I found was a guy selling one in England who said it had a cool surf-type reverb with lots of 'boing', but that hardly qualifies as reliable information.
However, I found the correct preamp schematic online:
http://www.korguk.com/voxcircuits/circuits/vlead100.jpg
Now, my knowledge of circuitry is too limited for me to read anything into the pots, resistors and caps values here. Does any of you guys see anything here that would indicate a really quiet reverb circuit? If so, do you have any idea of what could be done to increase the level of the signal coming back from the springs? This would pretty much turn this old grandma into my ideal touring amp!
I usually haunt the pickup-making part of this board...I have a pretty limited knowledge of the physiology of amps & their various pathologies, but that's something I want to get a bit more into, being the only guy in my bands who takes a soldering iron on tour and is expected to fix everything from dislocated shoulders to Fender Twins smoking ominously from the back.
I recently bought what turned out to be a really nice, well-kept vintage Vox Venue Lead 100 after becoming tired with changing tubes every other month. It is a solid state amp but the crunch that comes out of it stupidly sweet. I only went to check it out in this guy's garage but ended up taking it home as it felt as solid as a tank.
Anyway, the one issue with it is the spring reverb. It is barely audible, even with the pot on 10. I do have a few reverb pedals, but being more a straight-into-the-amp type of guy with an unhealthy tendency to crank the verb all the way up, I thought I'd give a try at sorting it out. The problem is that there is very little info about this amp on the internet, and there's very little way to tell if that 'verb was designed to be very discrete or if there is any kind of malfunction at work here. The one thing I found was a guy selling one in England who said it had a cool surf-type reverb with lots of 'boing', but that hardly qualifies as reliable information.
However, I found the correct preamp schematic online:
http://www.korguk.com/voxcircuits/circuits/vlead100.jpg
Now, my knowledge of circuitry is too limited for me to read anything into the pots, resistors and caps values here. Does any of you guys see anything here that would indicate a really quiet reverb circuit? If so, do you have any idea of what could be done to increase the level of the signal coming back from the springs? This would pretty much turn this old grandma into my ideal touring amp!
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