I am hoping you can help with trying to stop this 20Hz oscillation at the Phase Inverter of a Twin Reverb 2.
I am having difficulty getting more than 60watts RMS at the speaker terminal (22.5VAC RMS using Fluke 87 V into 8ohm resistive dummy load). The amp came in for buzzing, minimal clean headroom. I changed the original caps and the power tubes. The buzzing has gone, but the clean channel is clipping at less than 60w.
All the DC supply voltages seem to be spot on. I was tracing the 100 mV p-p sine wave through the clean channel until I came across this huge 20Hz oscillation at both plates of the PI. The supply at the other side of their 82K and 100K plate resistors looks clean. The strange thing is that just touching the pin 1 plate of the PI with the Fluke sent it into oscillation. Removing the probe did not stop the oscillation. I am hoping that with this oscillation gone, I may get more power from the amp. With a 1kHz 100mV sine wave at the input, the sine wave is superimposed on the oscillation resulting in a very ugly signal. I have tried several different 12AT7 and a 12AU7 as PI. I have chopsticked around and can't find any dodgy joints.
Here are the voltages around the PI. All volumes set to 0, Reverb at 0, all tones at 5, signal generator removed.
Pin AC (oscilloscope) VDC
1 49v p-p @ 20Hz 172v
2 38.7v
3 4.5v p-p @ 20Hz 46.9 v
4 Filament 6.3VAC
5 Filament 6.3VAC
6 48 p-p @ 20Hz 205v
7 39v
8 4.4v p-p @ 20Hz 46.9v
9 Filament 6.3VAC
I am on 240VAC 50Hz mains power.
Thank you
Twin Reverb II.pdf
I am having difficulty getting more than 60watts RMS at the speaker terminal (22.5VAC RMS using Fluke 87 V into 8ohm resistive dummy load). The amp came in for buzzing, minimal clean headroom. I changed the original caps and the power tubes. The buzzing has gone, but the clean channel is clipping at less than 60w.
All the DC supply voltages seem to be spot on. I was tracing the 100 mV p-p sine wave through the clean channel until I came across this huge 20Hz oscillation at both plates of the PI. The supply at the other side of their 82K and 100K plate resistors looks clean. The strange thing is that just touching the pin 1 plate of the PI with the Fluke sent it into oscillation. Removing the probe did not stop the oscillation. I am hoping that with this oscillation gone, I may get more power from the amp. With a 1kHz 100mV sine wave at the input, the sine wave is superimposed on the oscillation resulting in a very ugly signal. I have tried several different 12AT7 and a 12AU7 as PI. I have chopsticked around and can't find any dodgy joints.
Here are the voltages around the PI. All volumes set to 0, Reverb at 0, all tones at 5, signal generator removed.
Pin AC (oscilloscope) VDC
1 49v p-p @ 20Hz 172v
2 38.7v
3 4.5v p-p @ 20Hz 46.9 v
4 Filament 6.3VAC
5 Filament 6.3VAC
6 48 p-p @ 20Hz 205v
7 39v
8 4.4v p-p @ 20Hz 46.9v
9 Filament 6.3VAC
I am on 240VAC 50Hz mains power.
Thank you
Twin Reverb II.pdf
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