This is related to another thread, but I thought the issue deserved its own thread. If you're curious you can read the other thread here:
https://music-electronics-forum.com/...ing#post910033
Basic background info necessary to know how we got here:
I have a Marshall 2103 that had a broken presence control. It turned out to be a broken lead on the cap (hidden by a blob of solder). After repairing the circuit I wasn't happy with the tone of the amp (the presence circuit in question turns out to be always 'half on' even with the knob on zero). Chuck H suggested switching to the original Marshall presence circuit, which I did, and was happy with the result. However switching the amp off and turning the presence knob made very loud unpleasant noises, but the amp was perfectly usable. That's where the old thread ends.
Now it gets weird: The noises progressed within a few uses of the amp from being only when the standby switch was turned off to all the time. God knows why but I now could not switch the amp on without hideous loud noises, even with all controls on zero. With the phase inverter removed the amp was silent. I tried another known good valve in the PI slot. Still hideous noises.
So I decided to reverse the presence circuit to it's original (and broken) state, one step at a time, in order to try to find out where the issue was. I disconnected the presence cap. No difference, still hideous noises. I put the 4.7k resistor back. No difference, still hideous noises. I lifted the tag of the presence pot that I'd soldered to ground on the casing of the pot.... and bingo! Silence - and normal amp operation (with no presence control) restored.
Out of curiosity I removed the 4.7k resistor again, and the amp still continued to work perfectly (at least at the very, very quiet low gain setting I am using at home). So now something puzzles me - at this point the purple feedback wire and the ground wire are the only things connected to the presence pot. With no other resistor in place and no tag of the pot connected to ground, how is the phase inverter working? I thought the pot acted as the shunt resistor?
So why dig grounding the tag of the pot cause the progressive noise problem? I'd really like to get to the bottom of this issue, so any suggestions would be very much appreciated.
https://music-electronics-forum.com/...ing#post910033
Basic background info necessary to know how we got here:
I have a Marshall 2103 that had a broken presence control. It turned out to be a broken lead on the cap (hidden by a blob of solder). After repairing the circuit I wasn't happy with the tone of the amp (the presence circuit in question turns out to be always 'half on' even with the knob on zero). Chuck H suggested switching to the original Marshall presence circuit, which I did, and was happy with the result. However switching the amp off and turning the presence knob made very loud unpleasant noises, but the amp was perfectly usable. That's where the old thread ends.
Now it gets weird: The noises progressed within a few uses of the amp from being only when the standby switch was turned off to all the time. God knows why but I now could not switch the amp on without hideous loud noises, even with all controls on zero. With the phase inverter removed the amp was silent. I tried another known good valve in the PI slot. Still hideous noises.
So I decided to reverse the presence circuit to it's original (and broken) state, one step at a time, in order to try to find out where the issue was. I disconnected the presence cap. No difference, still hideous noises. I put the 4.7k resistor back. No difference, still hideous noises. I lifted the tag of the presence pot that I'd soldered to ground on the casing of the pot.... and bingo! Silence - and normal amp operation (with no presence control) restored.
Out of curiosity I removed the 4.7k resistor again, and the amp still continued to work perfectly (at least at the very, very quiet low gain setting I am using at home). So now something puzzles me - at this point the purple feedback wire and the ground wire are the only things connected to the presence pot. With no other resistor in place and no tag of the pot connected to ground, how is the phase inverter working? I thought the pot acted as the shunt resistor?
So why dig grounding the tag of the pot cause the progressive noise problem? I'd really like to get to the bottom of this issue, so any suggestions would be very much appreciated.
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