I've been messing around with a Dean Markley CD-60. It had been modded and repaired and left pretty messy, but working. I reversed all the mods and replaced most of the large caps and with the original 6L6s I have a very quiet, but dull sounding amp. I tried some JJ 6L6s that I ordered from Eurotubes.com for my Peavey Triumph. I needed to adjust the bias pretty far (I was increasing the resistance of the 5k bias pot) to get them to 32ma. I noticed as I increased the bias pot a hum started and then became pretty loud. so I put the other tubes in and rebiased and the hum went away. I didn't like sound of the JJs anyway so moved on to some Groove Tubes that came in my Egnater. They are supposed to be 5881s, but they are nothing like my Tung-Sol New Production 5881s (which I hear aren't really like the old 5881s, but I like the sound of them). I had to increase the bias resistance again, but not as far as the JJs and noticed a little hum. But they really sounded good. So being that I can't leave anything alone, I decided to modify it to be able to run EL34s. They work great. I changed the 5k bias pot to a 50k pot and adjusted the bias way up and the hum is back.
I started checking voltage on the tube sockets and when I touch pin5 of one of the tubes the hum completely went away. When I touch the other tubes pin5 it gets louder. So I wiggled the tubes with no noise or scratches. I had just cleaned the tube sockets earlier this week. So now I'm thinking that this could be normal and I just don't know why it does that.
So my 2 questions are (if you made it this far). Why would the hum change when I put a multimeter set for DC Volts on Pin 5? And is there anything I can change in the circuit to help the hum? I was thinking of a hum balancer like my Peavey has. I can get a schematic if someone needs it, but would be happy with general information about this.
Thanks
Bryan
I started checking voltage on the tube sockets and when I touch pin5 of one of the tubes the hum completely went away. When I touch the other tubes pin5 it gets louder. So I wiggled the tubes with no noise or scratches. I had just cleaned the tube sockets earlier this week. So now I'm thinking that this could be normal and I just don't know why it does that.
So my 2 questions are (if you made it this far). Why would the hum change when I put a multimeter set for DC Volts on Pin 5? And is there anything I can change in the circuit to help the hum? I was thinking of a hum balancer like my Peavey has. I can get a schematic if someone needs it, but would be happy with general information about this.
Thanks
Bryan
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