While servicing the amp I noticed a strange kind of signal distortion at large output in the Vibrato channel.
Especially with a square wave signal around 1 kHz signal it looks like ringing.
It only shows on one half-cycle and the amplitude of the ringing is relatively small.
But any sign of ringing makes me suspect a stability problem, so I was curious to find the root cause.
The effect disappears when I pull the reverb driver tube.
I did some tests to exclude a grounding problem, crosstalk between wires, bad filter caps or a conductive board.
I could trace the ringing artefact back to the grid of the reverb driver.
But there are no signs of grid conduction/clipping. Adding a 10k grid stopper doesn't change anything.
The ringing also disappears when I disconnect the tank input, i.e. the transducer load.
Scoping the driver plate signal shows a weird kind of distortion which disappears when the transducer is disconnected.
Using a square wave signal revealed that the distortion is caused by (asymmetrical) transducer core saturation:
At one side of the square wave the voltage collapses after a short peak, at the other side not.
Collapsing voltage is a sign of core saturation.
The asymmetry indicates a magnetized core.
Tried 2 other tanks and all showed the same effect.
So my conclusion is that the „ringing“ originates from reverb transducer core saturation and higher harmonics of the distorted plate signal get to the grid via the grid-to-plate capacitance of some pF and find their way back to the grid of the reverb/dry mixer tube V4A.
It is most likely a normal effect with most Fender amps and avoiding it would require to significantly reduce the reverb drive.
The effect might be common with other amps having a similar architecture.
Especially with a square wave signal around 1 kHz signal it looks like ringing.
It only shows on one half-cycle and the amplitude of the ringing is relatively small.
But any sign of ringing makes me suspect a stability problem, so I was curious to find the root cause.
The effect disappears when I pull the reverb driver tube.
I did some tests to exclude a grounding problem, crosstalk between wires, bad filter caps or a conductive board.
I could trace the ringing artefact back to the grid of the reverb driver.
But there are no signs of grid conduction/clipping. Adding a 10k grid stopper doesn't change anything.
The ringing also disappears when I disconnect the tank input, i.e. the transducer load.
Scoping the driver plate signal shows a weird kind of distortion which disappears when the transducer is disconnected.
Using a square wave signal revealed that the distortion is caused by (asymmetrical) transducer core saturation:
At one side of the square wave the voltage collapses after a short peak, at the other side not.
Collapsing voltage is a sign of core saturation.
The asymmetry indicates a magnetized core.
Tried 2 other tanks and all showed the same effect.
So my conclusion is that the „ringing“ originates from reverb transducer core saturation and higher harmonics of the distorted plate signal get to the grid via the grid-to-plate capacitance of some pF and find their way back to the grid of the reverb/dry mixer tube V4A.
It is most likely a normal effect with most Fender amps and avoiding it would require to significantly reduce the reverb drive.
The effect might be common with other amps having a similar architecture.
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