Gentlemen,
I've just replaced my Bandmaster Reverb output transformer with a new Hammond Bassman xformer, wanting to get a little more meat out of the low end if possible. It seems to work ok, but the sound is a little "spiky". A 400Hz test signal goes right thru to the output tube grids just great, (and even the plates as well) looks excellent on the scope right up till the PI distorts at too high a level. So far so good.
But on the output side, the signal seems a little more sawtooth-looking than the sine wave that is being input. The really weird part is, when I disconnect the negative feedback loop to the stock 820 ohm PI resistor, the amp's output goes DOWN, and the "sawtooth" appearance diminishes. When it's reconnected, the output signal goes UP. Being negative feedback, that doesn't make any sense to me. I assume that if I had the leads reversed on either primary or secondary, it would just howl (oscillate) like mad. On the output I'm using the green wire as the hot, black as the ground. The primary side is wired with the same color scheme as the original transformer. It seems that there isn't any proper negative feedback. Dunno... Any ideas on what's going on here?
Thanks much,
Chevy
I've just replaced my Bandmaster Reverb output transformer with a new Hammond Bassman xformer, wanting to get a little more meat out of the low end if possible. It seems to work ok, but the sound is a little "spiky". A 400Hz test signal goes right thru to the output tube grids just great, (and even the plates as well) looks excellent on the scope right up till the PI distorts at too high a level. So far so good.
But on the output side, the signal seems a little more sawtooth-looking than the sine wave that is being input. The really weird part is, when I disconnect the negative feedback loop to the stock 820 ohm PI resistor, the amp's output goes DOWN, and the "sawtooth" appearance diminishes. When it's reconnected, the output signal goes UP. Being negative feedback, that doesn't make any sense to me. I assume that if I had the leads reversed on either primary or secondary, it would just howl (oscillate) like mad. On the output I'm using the green wire as the hot, black as the ground. The primary side is wired with the same color scheme as the original transformer. It seems that there isn't any proper negative feedback. Dunno... Any ideas on what's going on here?
Thanks much,
Chevy
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