I have only been a member on this forum here for a little while but I have read more than a few threads here for years now. I purchased a Peavey Classic 50 4/10 model in the late 90's and played through it bone stock for years. I inevitably got some complaints from band members over time about the piercing high treble at times while playing a strat or anything else that used single coils, even humbuckers would come across wrong. I
ran across some ideas for modifying this amp on Steve Ahola's great site. I got up the courage and a healthy respect for the danger of operating on a tube circuit and went to work. I did a little at a time to test the changes, etc. The pcb isn't ideal to work on (to say the least) but I got used to it.
One of the first things I did was the cathode follower mod. V2A has a 25v25mf cathode bypass cap around 820R instead of the smaller 1mf. I found that cap value retains a better bass/treble balance between 'channels' and no more icepicks at all, just sweet harmonics. I no longer fear switching channels! I approached V2a like it was an initial gain stage where you don't want to chop off all the bass in the signal. 100k plate resistors for V1 and V2 as per Steve A's recommendations gives much better headroom than stock which really wakes up the overall sound of this amp. I changed the load resistor on V2B to a lower value of 56k. I found some information on Valve Wizard's site regarding this little mod. It creates this really smooth compression that is so beautiful. The compression is buttery, almost like power supply sag. When you hit the input of the amp with a really hot signal it's really thick and harmonically rich in either channel. The amp is very near cut-off (I'm not sure where exactly but wow!) when driven hard both at low and high output volumes which is great. I put a Mu-Tron III in the chain right before the input and cranked the gain knob. Blast off!
I obviously had to mod the tone stack. That took the most experimentation to get right. I found the best combination to be 56k slope w/ .022mf orange drops for bass and mid was the best (the stock caps are garbage). The treble cap was the hardest to nail down. I tried 360pf sm first. Way to much hi mids (ouch). Dropped it to 250pf sm, still too bright (!). Dropped it further to 100pf and this was the ticket. This value seems to narrow the treble bandwidth just enough, but not too much. The treble pot is very useful now in combination with the mid pot. The bass center frequency is perfect. This amp is now the best sounding amplifier I have ever played. It is such a stealth amp now. It has the awesome Fender cleans and will absolutely roar when you kick in V2. I am absolutely hooked on this amp, the tone is stunning. All you need is the volume knob on the guitar. The stock speakers sound great now that the amp is dialed in. Honestly, I LOVE this amp. It can go from nice pristine clean with just the right amount of treble to full on Van Halenesque where every tube is in saturation. This is a desert island amp for certain.
I just want to thank the experts here that have shared their insight and ideas. I am here to tell you that the Peavey Classic 50 can be successfully modified into an amp that is just so seductive it's not even fair to other amps. I am proud to say I have the pleasure of owning the best sounding
amp I've ever heard. I didn't cover all the changes I made to this circuit so if anyone is interested and curious feel free to ask. I highly recommend
anyone performing these mods check out The Valve Wizard's site and blueguitar.org if you haven't already, great sites. I don't know how to upload sound clips here but I would like to if anyone is interested (have to learn how first). Thanks y'all from beautiful Atlanta! Excuse me while I plug into this amp!
Cheers, Ben
ran across some ideas for modifying this amp on Steve Ahola's great site. I got up the courage and a healthy respect for the danger of operating on a tube circuit and went to work. I did a little at a time to test the changes, etc. The pcb isn't ideal to work on (to say the least) but I got used to it.
One of the first things I did was the cathode follower mod. V2A has a 25v25mf cathode bypass cap around 820R instead of the smaller 1mf. I found that cap value retains a better bass/treble balance between 'channels' and no more icepicks at all, just sweet harmonics. I no longer fear switching channels! I approached V2a like it was an initial gain stage where you don't want to chop off all the bass in the signal. 100k plate resistors for V1 and V2 as per Steve A's recommendations gives much better headroom than stock which really wakes up the overall sound of this amp. I changed the load resistor on V2B to a lower value of 56k. I found some information on Valve Wizard's site regarding this little mod. It creates this really smooth compression that is so beautiful. The compression is buttery, almost like power supply sag. When you hit the input of the amp with a really hot signal it's really thick and harmonically rich in either channel. The amp is very near cut-off (I'm not sure where exactly but wow!) when driven hard both at low and high output volumes which is great. I put a Mu-Tron III in the chain right before the input and cranked the gain knob. Blast off!
I obviously had to mod the tone stack. That took the most experimentation to get right. I found the best combination to be 56k slope w/ .022mf orange drops for bass and mid was the best (the stock caps are garbage). The treble cap was the hardest to nail down. I tried 360pf sm first. Way to much hi mids (ouch). Dropped it to 250pf sm, still too bright (!). Dropped it further to 100pf and this was the ticket. This value seems to narrow the treble bandwidth just enough, but not too much. The treble pot is very useful now in combination with the mid pot. The bass center frequency is perfect. This amp is now the best sounding amplifier I have ever played. It is such a stealth amp now. It has the awesome Fender cleans and will absolutely roar when you kick in V2. I am absolutely hooked on this amp, the tone is stunning. All you need is the volume knob on the guitar. The stock speakers sound great now that the amp is dialed in. Honestly, I LOVE this amp. It can go from nice pristine clean with just the right amount of treble to full on Van Halenesque where every tube is in saturation. This is a desert island amp for certain.
I just want to thank the experts here that have shared their insight and ideas. I am here to tell you that the Peavey Classic 50 can be successfully modified into an amp that is just so seductive it's not even fair to other amps. I am proud to say I have the pleasure of owning the best sounding
amp I've ever heard. I didn't cover all the changes I made to this circuit so if anyone is interested and curious feel free to ask. I highly recommend
anyone performing these mods check out The Valve Wizard's site and blueguitar.org if you haven't already, great sites. I don't know how to upload sound clips here but I would like to if anyone is interested (have to learn how first). Thanks y'all from beautiful Atlanta! Excuse me while I plug into this amp!
Cheers, Ben
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