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My first build - AB763 Deluxe Reverb clone - opinions please
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Originally posted by g1 View PostI bet if you sweep through some freqs with a dial type sig gen, you will see the kink get more or less severe. I just consider it an artifact of the reverb circuit?
Originally posted by The Dude View Post
I've heard my brittle sound in other Fender amps. Mine just seems a little crispier, so I wanted to try and figure it out.
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The customer described it as a "tinny distortion mostly when I play a 'D'". He is right. I hear it and it's not something typical. I've just started on the amp and also have other projects going, so it may be a bit. I haven't scoped it yet, but I'll update as to what I find.
Edit: I've also found that it's unaffected by tone controls. Even if you turn the treble down, the high frequency distortion is still present."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Note: Reply to the Dudes post:
Cabinet vibration?
And don't forget to look for foreign metal objects stuck to the speaker magnet.Last edited by Jazz P Bass; 07-07-2018, 04:00 AM.
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostThe customer described it as a "tinny distortion mostly when I play a 'D'". He is right. I hear it and it's not something typical. I've just started on the amp and also have other projects going, so it may be a bit. I haven't scoped it yet, but I'll update as to what I find.
Edit: I've also found that it's unaffected by tone controls. Even if you turn the treble down, the high frequency distortion is still present.
I haven't narrowed mine down to "D". When sweeping a recorded track with an EQ, it seems to me that it "pops" the most around 3200hz....which is like a G or something.
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Originally posted by Jazz P Bass View PostCabinet vibration?
And don't forget to look for foreign metal objects stuck to the speaker magnet.
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Originally posted by The Dude View Post
Hmmmm, I didn't hear the symptom on this until I turned up the bass control on my computer speakers.
(I have a Logitech THX speaker system with sub)
At first I was worried that my old guy hearing was going...
which is very worrying to me, since I have surprisingly excellent hearing for someone my age... 60.
But with the bass turned up I clearly hear a distinct "buzz".
Sorry for the slight O/T.
back to our regular program...If it ain't broke I'll fix it until it is...
I have just enough knowledge to be dangerous...
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FWIW: That "video" is just a generic test tone from YouTube. It's not a recording of the amp I'm working on. Sorry for the confusion. I simply linked it as a courtesy to the OP."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostFWIW: That "video" is just a generic test tone from YouTube. It's not a recording of the amp I'm working on. Sorry for the confusion. I simply linked it as a courtesy to the OP.
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Have you grounded the reverb circuit away from the preamp yet???"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Originally posted by Chuck H View PostHave you grounded the reverb circuit away from the preamp yet???
My RCA jacks are grounded to the chassis via contact. The transformer is grounded with the preamp buss. Should I just run it to the RCA jacks? Does it matter which one?
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Originally posted by Chuck H View PostHave you grounded the reverb circuit away from the preamp yet???
As you all probably know, this circuit has four B+ "nodes".
The filter cap node (B) that powers the reverb transformer is grounded with the power supply/center taps/output section (A,B,C). But I have the transformer itself grounded with the preamp node (D) which is separate from the other grounds. My thinking on this was to keep the preamp stuff totally separated from the output/power stuff. What I didn't consider at the time was having the transformer grounding with the preamps while the reverb's power supply is grounded elsewhere.
It would be simple to alter this arrangement and have the A node isolated with the power supply and B, C, and D ground together at the buss bar, which would put my reverb power and ground on the same plane....like an original stock Deluxe Reverb.
Is this something I should explore?
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Having B, C and D on the same ground away from the main filter is STILL less than ideal. At face value it doesn't look as though "Fender" considered grounding, but they did. A little. Their reverb circuit hums like it doesn't know the words. But this is WRT the signal path, not the power supply. Their power supply has all the filters grounded in the same place. For low gain applications this is probably acceptible, sort of. Where Fender did occasionally make concessions is with chassis grounds. I think there was clearly some alteration to what is grounded on the chassis where to achieve the lower noise option. Still not ideal, but ok as long as the amp isn't pressed into maximum output all the time (as todays amps are judged).
Each filter should be grounded with it's circuit at the chassis or on the buss as they occur in the circuit. If that makes sense.?. Short of trying to sort that out, just ground the reverb circuit at the RCA jacks for the tank and see if that doesn't help. It shouldn't matter which jack since they're only an inch apart on the chassis! There may still be a bunch of hum introduced when the reverb is turned up. We can deal with that as a different issue. Right now we just want the amp to behave.Last edited by Chuck H; 07-07-2018, 05:51 AM."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Originally posted by Greg_L View PostI just thought of something that might be an issue....
As you all probably know, this circuit has four B+ "nodes".
The filter cap node (B) that powers the reverb transformer is grounded with the power supply/center taps/output section (A,B,C). But I have the transformer itself grounded with the preamp node (D) which is separate from the other grounds. My thinking on this was to keep the preamp stuff totally separated from the output/power stuff. What I didn't consider at the time was having the transformer grounding with the preamps while the reverb's power supply is grounded elsewhere.
It would be simple to alter this arrangement and have the A node isolated with the power supply and B, C, and D ground together at the buss bar, which would put my reverb power and ground on the same plane....like an original stock Deluxe Reverb.
Is this something I should explore?Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)
"I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo
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Originally posted by Chuck H View PostHaving B, C and D on the same ground away from the main filter is STILL less than ideal. At face value it doesn't look as though "Fender" considered grounding, but they did. A little. Their reverb circuit hums like it doesn't know the words. But this is WRT the signal path, not the power supply. Their power supply has all the filters grounded in the same place. For low gain applications this is probably acceptible, sort of. Where Fender did occasionally make concessions is with chassis grounds. I think there was clearly some alteration to what is grounded on the chassis where to achieve the lower noise option. Still not ideal, but ok as long as the amp isn't pressed into maximum output all the time (as todays amps are judged).
Each filter should be grounded with it's circuit at the chassis or on the buss as they occur in the circuit. If that makes sense.?. Short of trying to sort that out, just ground the reverb circuit at the RCA jacks for the tank and see if that doesn't help. It shouldn't matter which jack since they're only an inch apart on the chassis! There may still be a bunch of hum introduced when the reverb is turned up. We can deal with that as a different issue. Right now we just want the amp to behave.Originally posted by tubeswell View PostI would ground the 12AT7 reverb driver cathode, grid leak and RT secondary at the same filter cap that you are taking the reverb transformer primary from. The other ground returns for teh reverb recovery etc can be with the filter cap node that you are taking the reverb recovery stage from. YMMV
If each filter should be grounded with it's circuit, if I'm understanding you correctly, then I should alter my filter cap grounding...putting B, C and D together at the buss bar to input jack corner ground - like Fender intended. The reverb transformer gets power from "B", and the preamp circuit, reverb circuit, and all the related pots and cathodes go to ground via the buss bar to chassis, so they'll all be grouped together and far far away from the mains/power supply/center taps ground. Moving the reverb transformer's ground to the RCA jacks (which are chassis grounded) will put it grounded in close proximity with the tank. So that will leave me with three grounding points - like a triangle - all pretty far from each other. But keep in mind I'm only trying to smooth out that kink that happens on the scope with the reverb circuit. It's not a hum issue.
Basically it would just be this:
I'd remove the X'd ground wire and put one between the C and D nodes. That would leave A node grounded all by itself at the PT, and the rest grounded via buss bar to input jack location.Last edited by Greg_L; 07-07-2018, 06:41 AM.
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