A blues guitarist friend of mine is looking for more volume from his Super Champ XD when the preamp is set for clean sounds. I was looking at the schematic from the Fender site and there is a 10k grid load resistor on the predriver ahead of the cathodyne PI. Damn, no wonder his amp is so anemic- that 10k grid load is like sucking all of the life out of that amp. I was thinking of replacing that resistor with a multi-turn cermet trim pot, probably 100k for starters, adjusted to whatever seems like an appropriate setting. Of course if we boost the output like that he will need to keep the preamp volumes down with the high gain distorted sounds. (I think that Fender was going for a fail-safe design so that it won't explode with all of controls set to 11 and a few cascaded OD boxes also cranked up to 11. My philosophy about guitar amp design is that they are like fine test equipment which needs to be adjusted carefully not an appliance that you just plug in and set to 10. Of course I guess that was just an excuse when the amps I built would oscillate like a mofo with everything turned up to 10.)
Here is a link to the schematic:
http://support.fender.com/schematics..._schematic.pdf
Any thoughts on this or other suggestions? My friend has a room full of guitar amps of various sizes but he got the Super Champ XD as something easy to pack around for low volume jams.
Thanks!
Steve Ahola
P.S. I was thinking it might be cool to add a Power Amp In jack on this if he wants to bypass all of the digital and ss crap in the preamp by plugging in a multiprocessor.
Here is a link to the schematic:
http://support.fender.com/schematics..._schematic.pdf
Any thoughts on this or other suggestions? My friend has a room full of guitar amps of various sizes but he got the Super Champ XD as something easy to pack around for low volume jams.
Thanks!
Steve Ahola
P.S. I was thinking it might be cool to add a Power Amp In jack on this if he wants to bypass all of the digital and ss crap in the preamp by plugging in a multiprocessor.
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