Hello,
I thought I would share this modification I made to my amp. It is a 1983 with a 1x12 Celestion Vintage 30, using Russian 6L6's. I cleaned up the first channel by increasing the plate voltage on V1-taken from point D vs E on the stock schematic. I also increased the cathode resistor to 1500 vs 680 and the bypass cap from 25uF/25v to 68uf/160v.
On channel two I moved the tone stack after the first preamp tube V2A, dropped plated voltage on that tube to dial in distortion-little to fuzz-then shape it through the tone stack out a pot to a full wired (parallel) triode (I liked the 12AU7). It is the other half of the second preamp stage V4B, of the same tube as V4A, and was not used-not wired. I took advantage of that and copied the circuit for the input preamp tube V1. Same configuration. This allows one to amplify the chosen shaped distortion cleanly until really overdriven (if desired). You can get almost as clean as channel one and anywhere in between to Ozzy fuzz without it sounding muddy.
I also added a fixed bias adjustment pot to dial in the correct bias voltage in addition to the stock bias balance pot. (the one I used in 100K with a 4.7K wired parallel, that's all I had of that type of pot) I then added a switch to change from the fixed bias to cathode bias. Cathode bias has more sustain, breakup, compression, sag and less gain. It is used in most lower power amps up to 18-20 watts. Good for blues, classic rock and situations where you don't want so much bite with every hard stroke. Fixed bias is in most higher powered amps and is better for up front picking, heavy metal, jazz, country, more gain and pick response.
I really like the sounds available now, very versatile. And the distortion channel, IMHO sounds much better than Rivera's.
Here's the changes:
Daniel Scott
I thought I would share this modification I made to my amp. It is a 1983 with a 1x12 Celestion Vintage 30, using Russian 6L6's. I cleaned up the first channel by increasing the plate voltage on V1-taken from point D vs E on the stock schematic. I also increased the cathode resistor to 1500 vs 680 and the bypass cap from 25uF/25v to 68uf/160v.
On channel two I moved the tone stack after the first preamp tube V2A, dropped plated voltage on that tube to dial in distortion-little to fuzz-then shape it through the tone stack out a pot to a full wired (parallel) triode (I liked the 12AU7). It is the other half of the second preamp stage V4B, of the same tube as V4A, and was not used-not wired. I took advantage of that and copied the circuit for the input preamp tube V1. Same configuration. This allows one to amplify the chosen shaped distortion cleanly until really overdriven (if desired). You can get almost as clean as channel one and anywhere in between to Ozzy fuzz without it sounding muddy.
I also added a fixed bias adjustment pot to dial in the correct bias voltage in addition to the stock bias balance pot. (the one I used in 100K with a 4.7K wired parallel, that's all I had of that type of pot) I then added a switch to change from the fixed bias to cathode bias. Cathode bias has more sustain, breakup, compression, sag and less gain. It is used in most lower power amps up to 18-20 watts. Good for blues, classic rock and situations where you don't want so much bite with every hard stroke. Fixed bias is in most higher powered amps and is better for up front picking, heavy metal, jazz, country, more gain and pick response.
I really like the sounds available now, very versatile. And the distortion channel, IMHO sounds much better than Rivera's.
Here's the changes:
Daniel Scott
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