Hey All,
I'm new around here. It looks like there's a lot of knowledge floating around here. I'm currently in my first serious amp-mod project and was looking for some thoughts on how to fix some of my issues...
So, a month or so ago I bought a new Fender '65 Deluxe Reverb Reissue. It's pretty sweet. I like it. My previous amps were a Roland JC77 (like the JC120, only smaller) for my light-weight amp and a Mesa-Boogie rack system for my heavy-weight amp. I got the Fender DRRI because I was doing more Rolling Stones kinda stuff and I needed a better clean-broken up kind of sound.
Upon getting the DRRI home, I saw that it came with the schematic (I'd never bought a new amp before). The schematic totally lit me up.
Since I never use the "normal" channel (it has no reverb...why would I use it?), there sat both halves of a 12AX7 that were just begging to be used. Begging!
It didn't take long for the idea of using those gain stages to give me an overdrive lead tone. All I'd have to do is patch over one of those gain stages into the input of the "vibrato" channel. Simple cascade. Nothing shocking. I mean, the Boogie Mk I pre-amp was just a fender pre-amp with one more gain stage added at the beginning. That's exactly what I'm talking about here. If they could do it, why not me?!? If successful, I'd be able to get my clean thing going and then I could switch in some gain to get some Santana action as well. That would be awesome. OK, I got out the soldering iron...
So, from the "normal" side of the amp, my plan was to let the signal go through one half of the 12AX7, go through the tone stack, through the volume pot, and then lift the wire before it heads back to the other half of the 12AX7. I could then patch this wire (via a switch discussed below) and patch that into the "vibrato" channel. Yes.
Of course, the boogie MK 1 doesn't have a tone stack between the first and second gain stage as would happen with the above description. So, I lifted the tone stack's ground resistor. This defeated the tone stack allowing it to maintain full signal strength through to the volume pot. Since the MK 1 does have a volume pot after its first gain stage, I left this volume pot (the volume for the "normal" channel) in the path. Sweet.
Then, I added a DPDT switch to the "vibrato" channel just prior to its first 12AX7 gain stage. The switch swaps from (a) the traditional input from the instrument jack (after the 68K resistors and after 1M to ground) and swaps to (b) the gained-up signal from just after the volume pot on the "normal" channel described above. So far so good.
Now, the final major topological feature still missing in my amp versus the MK 1 is a master volume. My amp has a volume 1 and volume 2 like the MK 1 (volume 1 is the volume knob from the "normal" channel and volume 2 is the volume knob from the "vibrato" channel) but no master volume. In the Mk 1, Volume 2 really likes to sit around 6-7 to get a good saturated lead tone. Without a master volume, I can't turn up my volume 2 knob up this high without also getting really loud and overdriving my power tubes. While that's cool in its own way, it doesn't sound at all like the MK1. I need a master volume to allow me to control the second level of pre-amp distoration (Volume 2) from the amount of power tube distortion (master volume).
So, to give me a master volume, I tied in a high-value log pot to ground on the line heading out of the pre-amp section toward the phase inverter. The pot is switchable into or out of the circuit. Nice.
With all of these switches, I can easily swtich everything back so that the "vibrato" channel is stock. After all, I bought the amp because the stock "vibrato" channel sounded so good. Any gained-up sounds I add to the amp should not be at the expense of my cool clean channel.
Okay, I've gotten pretty long here. Sorry. It's just so much fun! While the mods went pretty well, my problems are thus:
(1) I played a MK1 re-issue in the store last weekend and it has a lot more saturated gain than I get out of mine. I want that saturated Santana lead sound.
(2) my lack of saturated gain might be due to the fact that I can't turn up Volume 1 past 7 without getting a high-pitched squealing sound and I can't turn up Volume 2 past 5.5 without getting a similar high-pitched squealing. Ouch!
Here are the questions for all of you out there...I was wondering if anyone has tried this type of mod with their old-style Fender? How did it go? Did you get the squealing problem? What can be done to squash it?
Finally, if the squeal can be squashed, I've got the other half of the "normal" channel 12AX7 doing nothing...what can I do with it?...mod the amp some more to put that in the signal path like the boogie Mk II/III/IV??? Mmm...more fun!
Thanks for you thoughts...
Chip
I'm new around here. It looks like there's a lot of knowledge floating around here. I'm currently in my first serious amp-mod project and was looking for some thoughts on how to fix some of my issues...
So, a month or so ago I bought a new Fender '65 Deluxe Reverb Reissue. It's pretty sweet. I like it. My previous amps were a Roland JC77 (like the JC120, only smaller) for my light-weight amp and a Mesa-Boogie rack system for my heavy-weight amp. I got the Fender DRRI because I was doing more Rolling Stones kinda stuff and I needed a better clean-broken up kind of sound.
Upon getting the DRRI home, I saw that it came with the schematic (I'd never bought a new amp before). The schematic totally lit me up.
Since I never use the "normal" channel (it has no reverb...why would I use it?), there sat both halves of a 12AX7 that were just begging to be used. Begging!
It didn't take long for the idea of using those gain stages to give me an overdrive lead tone. All I'd have to do is patch over one of those gain stages into the input of the "vibrato" channel. Simple cascade. Nothing shocking. I mean, the Boogie Mk I pre-amp was just a fender pre-amp with one more gain stage added at the beginning. That's exactly what I'm talking about here. If they could do it, why not me?!? If successful, I'd be able to get my clean thing going and then I could switch in some gain to get some Santana action as well. That would be awesome. OK, I got out the soldering iron...
So, from the "normal" side of the amp, my plan was to let the signal go through one half of the 12AX7, go through the tone stack, through the volume pot, and then lift the wire before it heads back to the other half of the 12AX7. I could then patch this wire (via a switch discussed below) and patch that into the "vibrato" channel. Yes.
Of course, the boogie MK 1 doesn't have a tone stack between the first and second gain stage as would happen with the above description. So, I lifted the tone stack's ground resistor. This defeated the tone stack allowing it to maintain full signal strength through to the volume pot. Since the MK 1 does have a volume pot after its first gain stage, I left this volume pot (the volume for the "normal" channel) in the path. Sweet.
Then, I added a DPDT switch to the "vibrato" channel just prior to its first 12AX7 gain stage. The switch swaps from (a) the traditional input from the instrument jack (after the 68K resistors and after 1M to ground) and swaps to (b) the gained-up signal from just after the volume pot on the "normal" channel described above. So far so good.
Now, the final major topological feature still missing in my amp versus the MK 1 is a master volume. My amp has a volume 1 and volume 2 like the MK 1 (volume 1 is the volume knob from the "normal" channel and volume 2 is the volume knob from the "vibrato" channel) but no master volume. In the Mk 1, Volume 2 really likes to sit around 6-7 to get a good saturated lead tone. Without a master volume, I can't turn up my volume 2 knob up this high without also getting really loud and overdriving my power tubes. While that's cool in its own way, it doesn't sound at all like the MK1. I need a master volume to allow me to control the second level of pre-amp distoration (Volume 2) from the amount of power tube distortion (master volume).
So, to give me a master volume, I tied in a high-value log pot to ground on the line heading out of the pre-amp section toward the phase inverter. The pot is switchable into or out of the circuit. Nice.
With all of these switches, I can easily swtich everything back so that the "vibrato" channel is stock. After all, I bought the amp because the stock "vibrato" channel sounded so good. Any gained-up sounds I add to the amp should not be at the expense of my cool clean channel.
Okay, I've gotten pretty long here. Sorry. It's just so much fun! While the mods went pretty well, my problems are thus:
(1) I played a MK1 re-issue in the store last weekend and it has a lot more saturated gain than I get out of mine. I want that saturated Santana lead sound.
(2) my lack of saturated gain might be due to the fact that I can't turn up Volume 1 past 7 without getting a high-pitched squealing sound and I can't turn up Volume 2 past 5.5 without getting a similar high-pitched squealing. Ouch!
Here are the questions for all of you out there...I was wondering if anyone has tried this type of mod with their old-style Fender? How did it go? Did you get the squealing problem? What can be done to squash it?
Finally, if the squeal can be squashed, I've got the other half of the "normal" channel 12AX7 doing nothing...what can I do with it?...mod the amp some more to put that in the signal path like the boogie Mk II/III/IV??? Mmm...more fun!
Thanks for you thoughts...
Chip
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