I have an amp here built by Hammond of Guelph Ontario. The (attached) schematic drawing dates to 1946 and apparently this specimen was built in 1949. The owner brought it to me to have the inputs changed to 1/4". I replaced the 6N7 tube (my tester showed the existing one was bad) and I replaced a couple of leaky caps and a resistor that had drifted from 100K to 160K. The "Pickup" channel sounds fine but is not very loud, there is one less gain stage than the other channel. Turning the volume up on the "Mic" channel, it sounds very warm and robust, starts to clip around 5, then just past 7 it starts to squeal. I swapped all the tubes save for the 6C5 (didn't have a spare), swapped out all filter caps and the cathode bypass caps on the 6L6's and the 6N7, tried 470 ohm resistors on the 6L6 screen grids (a la Fender), connected a 1 Meg resistor from input to ground, and even disconnected the other channel (lifted pin 6/plate #2 on the 6N7). After doing all that I discovered that while I could get rid of the squeal by turning down the tone knob, when I turned the volume up yet a bit more the amp started to oscillate in a medium speed tremolo like fashion. I checked the B+ and I can see it moving up and down in time with the oscillation. I swapped in another rectifier but the problem persists. Does this suggest a bad power transformer?
B
Here's the schematic and an audio file from my iPhone (I think the Voice Notes app compression makes the noise level seem louder than it is, the amp is actually pretty quiet at moderate levels). In the recording the tone knob is down and I'm turning up the volume until it oscillates. then I turn the tone knob up and you can hear the high squeal along with the thump. At the end I turn the volume back down to 5 or so and tap on the guitar strings a bit.
New Recording 112.m4a
Edit: FWIW, I should maybe clarify regarding swapping out caps. The caps in question are electrolytics and could very well be original. Yes, they should be replaced as a matter of course, but I haven't had that conversation with the owner yet. Anyway, I did not have new ones in all at once, rather, I'd swap in a pair or a single and when that didn't alleviate the problem I'd reverse swap and move on to the next caps. In hindsight maybe I should have done it cumulatively. Or maybe the problem has nothing to do with old caps?
B
Here's the schematic and an audio file from my iPhone (I think the Voice Notes app compression makes the noise level seem louder than it is, the amp is actually pretty quiet at moderate levels). In the recording the tone knob is down and I'm turning up the volume until it oscillates. then I turn the tone knob up and you can hear the high squeal along with the thump. At the end I turn the volume back down to 5 or so and tap on the guitar strings a bit.
New Recording 112.m4a
Edit: FWIW, I should maybe clarify regarding swapping out caps. The caps in question are electrolytics and could very well be original. Yes, they should be replaced as a matter of course, but I haven't had that conversation with the owner yet. Anyway, I did not have new ones in all at once, rather, I'd swap in a pair or a single and when that didn't alleviate the problem I'd reverse swap and move on to the next caps. In hindsight maybe I should have done it cumulatively. Or maybe the problem has nothing to do with old caps?
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