Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

STF Electronics 5F1 Clone

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • STF Electronics 5F1 Clone

    Hi,
    I built a STF electronics 5F1 clone a few years back and while the amp sounds really nice, it doesn't produce as much overdrive/distortion as I've experienced from other "champ" amps I've used. I did build it with a tone circuit, so I'm wondering if this is where some of the gain in the plain 5f1 circuit is being lost...Thx in advance for any ideas

  • #2
    What does your tone circuit look like? Is it a single-knob Princeton-style or something else?

    Comment


    • #3
      Yes, single knob "princeton style"... Full left = Bassy sound... Full right = Trebley sound... Am I right to assume this is a simple HP filter? Thx

      Comment


      • #4
        Anyone?...Anyone?...

        Comment


        • #5
          For added gain add a bypass cap across the 1k5 resistor on triode one. Don't do the same on triode two or you'll kill the negative feedback.

          Edit: not tube one, triode one.
          Valvulados

          Comment


          • #6
            Thanks for the reply. Ok, this would be the cathode resistor correct? Grid bias is most often provided by a cathode resistor. If the cathode resistor is unbypassed, negative feedback is introduced and each half of a 12AX7 provides a typical voltage gain of about 30...The cathode resistor can be bypassed to reduce or eliminate AC negative feedback and thereby increase gain Now I'm a little confused because the little research I've done shows the cathode resistor on pin 3 (cathode - triode 2) while the cathode for triode 1 is pin 8...

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by dporto View Post
              Thanks for the reply. Ok, this would be the cathode resistor correct? Grid bias is most often provided by a cathode resistor. If the cathode resistor is unbypassed, negative feedback is introduced and each half of a 12AX7 provides a typical voltage gain of about 30...The cathode resistor can be bypassed to reduce or eliminate AC negative feedback and thereby increase gain Now I'm a little confused because the little research I've done shows the cathode resistor on pin 3 (cathode - triode 2) while the cathode for triode 1 is pin 8...
              That is common practice. Triode two in a 12ax7 is often quieter than triode 1, so often they use that for the input which is the most critical gain stage noise-wise and then come back to triode one for the 2nd gain stage. Follow the input lead, you'll get to either pin 2 or 7. If pin 2, you can bypass the resistor on pin 3. If input is on pin 7 you can bypass the resistor on pin 8. Just be careful to not bypass the other one, it's where negative feedback comes in.
              Valvulados

              Comment


              • #8
                Wow thatwas quick! Thanks very much. I'll dig in soon and give it a shot.

                Comment

                Working...
                X