Originally posted by Greg_L
View Post
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
My first build - AB763 Deluxe Reverb clone - opinions please
Collapse
X
-
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
-
-
Originally posted by Justin Thomas View PostOriginally posted by The Dude View PostThe '68 reissue has a 1.5K NFB resistor...
I know it's a small point, but I feel it's worth making...
Carry on.
Justin
So while not a reissue of something that Fender ever sold it might be a "reissue" (not really the best word) of an actual amp that had been customized... Probably not in the real world but it might have been, right?
Full-sized carry-on bags are not permitted on United Basic Economy flights!
Steve A.The Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
Comment
-
With small signals in a Long Tail Pair inverter the signal is balanced, but as the signal gets bigger, the result of slight signal imbalance from the inverting triode driving the non-inverting triode gets more accentuated. If the LTP is biased on the warm side, the inverting (master) triode reaches grid-current-limiting sooner causing the input coupling cap to charge up, which in turn shifts the grid voltage more negative thus biasing the tube closer to cut-off. The signal on the master (input) triode plate gets clipped on the positive side, which shifts the whole output signal more negative to compensate. These negative signal peaks are passed into the slave (non-inverting) triode, which cause it to draw grid current, draining charge from its decoupling cap, which means the average bias on the slave triode remains more-or-less unchanged. But because the signal from the master (inverting) triode output is heavily clipped on the positive side, so it spends more time positive than negative, but the non-inverting output is doing the exact opposite. This means that one output tube gets driven harder than the other, which can also cause that side to red-plate under heavy signal conditions. Getting the LTP more centre-biased can help prevent this (along with using decent grid stoppers on the output tube grids).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
Comment
-
Originally posted by tubeswell View PostWith small signals in a Long Tail Pair inverter the signal is balanced, but as the signal gets bigger, the result of slight signal imbalance from the inverting triode driving the non-inverting triode gets more accentuated. If the LTP is biased on the warm side, the inverting (master) triode reaches grid-current-limiting sooner causing the input coupling cap to charge up, which in turn shifts the grid voltage more negative thus biasing the tube closer to cut-off. The signal on the master (input) triode plate gets clipped on the positive side, which shifts the whole output signal more negative to compensate. These negative signal peaks are passed into the slave (non-inverting) triode, which cause it to draw grid current, draining charge from its decoupling cap, which means the average bias on the slave triode remains more-or-less unchanged. But because the signal from the master (inverting) triode output is heavily clipped on the positive side, so it spends more time positive than negative, but the non-inverting output is doing the exact opposite. This means that one output tube gets driven harder than the other, which can also cause that side to red-plate under heavy signal conditions. Getting the LTP more centre-biased can help prevent this (along with using decent grid stoppers on the output tube grids).
So how do I look for something wrong there, and what do I look for?
I have not had any red plating. This amp has been pushed hard in it's short life and nothing's gone bad yet.
Comment
-
Originally posted by tubeswell View PostWith small signals in a Long Tail Pair inverter the signal is balanced, but as the signal gets bigger, the result of slight signal imbalance from the inverting triode driving the non-inverting triode gets more accentuated...
One question: some guitarists like to replace the 12AT7 in the BF/SF phase inverter without changing the circuit. What effect would that have in regards to your explanation?
One comment/questions: the phase inverter in the Dumble ODS #124 works very well with its trim pot. Now that the circuitry of #124 has been verified and widely circulated has its PI been "officially" added to the list of cool mods for the SF/SF design? Also if connected to 4 or 16 ohm speaker tap what would you recommend to replace the 4K7/3W resistor? And finally what value fixed resistor would you suggest in lieu of the 2KB presence control?
Steve A.
P.S. Would anyone care to explain how to set the 5K bias trim pot?
The Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Greg_L View PostWow, thanks for that. Makes sense.
So how do I look for something wrong there, and what do I look for?
I have not had any red plating. This amp has been pushed hard in it's short life and nothing's gone bad yet.
How did the 220pF grid-to-cathode caps work out?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
Comment
-
Merlin Blencowe covers this topic in the 2nd edition designing pre-amps book.
Its more of a problem in classic Marshall amps which run EL34s at high plate and screen (~500V) voltaqes.
If its a 12AT7, 470R-560R is a reasonable (shared) bias resistor value (for a cathode-biased stage). If its a 12AX7, 820R - 1k2 is more appropriate.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
Comment
-
Originally posted by Greg_L View PostHave not tried yet. Tomorrow is work-on-amp-day.
I am a "fly by the seat of my pants" DIY hobbyist and if it were me I would add a AC30 style Cut control (which is great for matching your amp to whatever speaker you will be using) and if it solves the immediate problem be done with it for now. If you don't want to add or repurpose an existing hole for the control you can use use a trim pot for now or wire up a regular pot and wrap it with Scotch 33+ electrical tape. But I am assuming that as you use the amp you will want to make fine tuning tweaks, etc., and will be pulling the chassis out quite often as I would.
Good luck! When I saw these threads popping up about building amps with reverb and tremolo I did not realize that there were kits to build them priced very reasonably these days... half the retail price of a DRRI. God bless China!
Most of the old timers here would have never thought of trying to build a BF/SF amp with reverb and vibrato from scratch - especially as a first build!
As I think you might have suggested in one of your posts it would be extremely helpful for the vendor or affiliated user group to post detailed pictures showing the exact lead dress for successful builds including the wire under the boards as it can be extremely critical especially as we push these amps with sound and voltage levels never intended by Leo back in the 60's.
BTW one point that might not yet have come up in this discussion is that you sometimes need to shield the larger signal leads later in the circuit to keep them from broadcasting crap that is picked up by the more sensitive circuitry in prior stages. I like to stock a good amount of green waxed pushback wire for that purpose... to at least temporarily wrap around wires that I suspect might be causing interference in previous stages. If you ever do that you can try connecting it to different ground points to see if it makes a difference.
And don't forget about positive and negative feedback... each gain stage inverts the signal so if there is parasitic inference with the immediately previous stage you have negative feedback which will "calm" the signal to use the technical term. It is when you go back two stages (or any even number) that you can get positive feedback which can result in those nasty oscillations the amp guys keep talking about.
Steve A.
P.S. Are the supplied eyelet boards traditional fiberboard/fishpaper/whatever-it-is-is-called-these-days or something more modern? Just wondering...The Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Steve A. View PostAre the supplied eyelet boards traditional fiberboard/fishpaper/whatever-it-is-is-called-these-days or something more modern?This isn't the future I signed up for.
Comment
Comment