I got a '63 Fender Bassman piggyback amp in a trade a few weeks ago and I just noticed tonight that when I play notes past the twelfth fret on the B string I get this weird out of tune, fuzzy harmony note that appears in the background right after the note's transient tapers off.
It's hardly noticeable if you're using the bridge pickup but it's really noticeable when on the neck pickup, it seems that the bassier it is, the worse the problem becomes.
At first I thought that it might be the speakers causing the problem but I tried this head with another cab and it's the same deal. Then I thought that the problem might disappear if I'd turn down the amp's volume but it's still there.
I know that filter caps can cause this type of problem but half of the caps in my amp are pretty close to being new already. All of those big electrolytic caps in the "doghouse" have been replaced with Sprague Atoms, so that should be alright. All of the remaining five or six electrolytic caps inside the chassis are original Astrons and I just haven't gotten around to replacing them yet, do you think that that might be my problem? Or are my Spragues less then healthy? Any chance that a bad tube might be the culprit?
What about adding grid-stopper resistors? I seen a chassis picture of an amp like mine and the guy had some grid-stopper resistors installed on the two power tubes. Do you suppose that that might cure my problem?
I'd appreciate any opinions with this. Thanks!
It's hardly noticeable if you're using the bridge pickup but it's really noticeable when on the neck pickup, it seems that the bassier it is, the worse the problem becomes.
At first I thought that it might be the speakers causing the problem but I tried this head with another cab and it's the same deal. Then I thought that the problem might disappear if I'd turn down the amp's volume but it's still there.
I know that filter caps can cause this type of problem but half of the caps in my amp are pretty close to being new already. All of those big electrolytic caps in the "doghouse" have been replaced with Sprague Atoms, so that should be alright. All of the remaining five or six electrolytic caps inside the chassis are original Astrons and I just haven't gotten around to replacing them yet, do you think that that might be my problem? Or are my Spragues less then healthy? Any chance that a bad tube might be the culprit?
What about adding grid-stopper resistors? I seen a chassis picture of an amp like mine and the guy had some grid-stopper resistors installed on the two power tubes. Do you suppose that that might cure my problem?
I'd appreciate any opinions with this. Thanks!
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