(I had the cap wired to a wire lead of about 8", allowing me to move it around).
And letting it close to the input jack?
This is not a part *value* problem !!!!
Itīs a *layout* problem!!!!
I was swapping out different capacitor values just to see what would happen, got squealing no matter what I did. Then I wired a capacitor alone without running thru the pot and the squealing went away. But, when I moved the capacitor near where the pot was (I mounted it in the number 2 input spot), I got squealing again. When the cap was away from the input jack, everything was fine. I could actually move the capacitor back and forth near the potentiometer/input jack and it sounded like the world's most annoying metal detector (I had the cap wired to a wire lead of about 8", allowing me to move it around). So, I'm no electrical genius, but the terms "oscillation" and "feedback" come to mind... it does resemble super high pitched feedback. It would seem that the solution is simply to move the potentiometer elsewhere, away from the input jack. I'm guessing the cap is receiving or transmitting a signal that the input cable/guitar signal are picking up?
Any discussion on cap *value* is nil, compared to that.
Why didnīt you just tack solder it to the original cap pads?
Which is where it belongs.
This reminds me of a similar discussion, which went on for dozens of answers, where there was a hum problem and everybody offered tons of suggestions about filter caps, transformer orientation, screen resistors, grounding, the works.
After a couple pages of such, the OP said, casually , that the amp hummed a lot "with not guitar attached" ... which only then he expained meant the guitar cable plugged in, no guitar at the other end, the free plug just laying somewhere on the table ... and the volume around 5 or 6.
Talk about chasing goblins!!
Comment