I picked a 2006 TSL 100 amp for cheap that had a loose foot switch jack on the amp and bad plug on the foot switch itself.
After re-soldering the 6 pin DIN jack to the PCB I installed two machine screws to fasten it to the chassis.
Like Marshall did with the DI XLR jack.
I also replaced the DIN plug on the foot switch with a heavy duty metal one. If anyone needs one let me know, I have several left.
I did the Jerry FJA speaker jack ground mod, added a 3H choke, swapped some power supply diodes with some faster UF4007 ones.
I also have a DSL 100 to compare it to. The TSL has more gain on the crunch channel so I have to set the gain lower to match, sounds pretty much the same as the green crunch on the DSL then. To me the clean is better on the TSL not Fender clean but more usable than the DSL
The Red channel is a little too bright if I use 8k PAF style humbuckers and bright speakers like Eminence Wizards or some old Peavey 1230 Sheffields. With hotter pickups it's works out better. Or use dark speakers like some Mesa Black Shadow MC90 knocks a lot of high end out.
Still a bit different compared to the DSL. I really think Marshall designed these and the DSL to be used with high output pickups.
My question is has anyone done these TSL to DSL mods below?
Mainboard:
C18 chang to 470pf - DSL value instead of TSL value, bleeds more high frequencies off after initial distortion stage (V1AA) in crunch and lead channels
TR2 removed - eliminates high-frequency boost @ ~7kHz (cathode bypass, V2AA) in crunch and lead channels
(I read elsewhere on the forum someone did remove the TR2 this and lost the clean channel?)
Remove TR2 10nF C24 bypass cap to 4th cathode and changing 100 pF C18 cap to 470 pF. That should remove fizzyness and stiffness and bring back the tone to classic Marshall crunch territory.
replacing 2nd stage's anode resistor R13 from 100K (TSL) to 220K (DSL) and 1st coupling cap C16 from 2n2 (TSL) to 4n7 (DSL). Increasing anode resistor will give more gain and increasing CC will bring more lows to the sound.
Lead panel PCB:
C9 changed to 100pf - bleeds less high frequencies past gain pot at lower settings (no effect when gain at max).
68pf mica cap added across VR2 (channel volume) - first-order lowpass filter bleeding off treble frequencies above ~4.5kHz
Values of R25 and R26 reversed - increases available reverb mix on clean channel, decreases available reverb mix on both drive channels
Replace C36/C37 with higher voltage parts, i.e. 500V or 630V - for reliability, these caps fail if a power tube shorts plate or screen to control grid, then bias gets mysteriously dragged down and the problem is extremely difficult to locate.
Crunch PCB:
68pf mica cap added across VR2 (channel volume) - first-order lowpass filter bleeding off treble frequencies above ~4.5kHz
Other:
Mercury Magnetics MAR100-OM output transformer - bandwidth, headroom, reliability
Reverb tank replaced with Accutronics Type-9, 9BB3C1D - longer, more complex reverb sound
Notes:
Do NOT increase the size of interstage coupling caps if you downtune, it just makes the distortion farty.
Avoid strapping a cap across R1 on the mainboard for “fizz-reduction,” since it will affect all 3 channels, potentially making the clean channel sound dull.
DSL 100 Circuit Schematic http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...01)%20iss7.pdf
DSL 100 Tone Stack Schematic http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...01)%20iss5.pdf
TSL 100 Circuit Schematic http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...03)%20iss7.pdf
TSL 100 Lead Channel http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...98)%20iss4.pdf
TSL 100 Crunch Channel http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...98)%20iss2.pdf
TSL 100 Clean Channel http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...98)%20iss4.pdf
After re-soldering the 6 pin DIN jack to the PCB I installed two machine screws to fasten it to the chassis.
Like Marshall did with the DI XLR jack.
I also replaced the DIN plug on the foot switch with a heavy duty metal one. If anyone needs one let me know, I have several left.
I did the Jerry FJA speaker jack ground mod, added a 3H choke, swapped some power supply diodes with some faster UF4007 ones.
I also have a DSL 100 to compare it to. The TSL has more gain on the crunch channel so I have to set the gain lower to match, sounds pretty much the same as the green crunch on the DSL then. To me the clean is better on the TSL not Fender clean but more usable than the DSL
The Red channel is a little too bright if I use 8k PAF style humbuckers and bright speakers like Eminence Wizards or some old Peavey 1230 Sheffields. With hotter pickups it's works out better. Or use dark speakers like some Mesa Black Shadow MC90 knocks a lot of high end out.
Still a bit different compared to the DSL. I really think Marshall designed these and the DSL to be used with high output pickups.
My question is has anyone done these TSL to DSL mods below?
Mainboard:
C18 chang to 470pf - DSL value instead of TSL value, bleeds more high frequencies off after initial distortion stage (V1AA) in crunch and lead channels
TR2 removed - eliminates high-frequency boost @ ~7kHz (cathode bypass, V2AA) in crunch and lead channels
(I read elsewhere on the forum someone did remove the TR2 this and lost the clean channel?)
Remove TR2 10nF C24 bypass cap to 4th cathode and changing 100 pF C18 cap to 470 pF. That should remove fizzyness and stiffness and bring back the tone to classic Marshall crunch territory.
replacing 2nd stage's anode resistor R13 from 100K (TSL) to 220K (DSL) and 1st coupling cap C16 from 2n2 (TSL) to 4n7 (DSL). Increasing anode resistor will give more gain and increasing CC will bring more lows to the sound.
Lead panel PCB:
C9 changed to 100pf - bleeds less high frequencies past gain pot at lower settings (no effect when gain at max).
68pf mica cap added across VR2 (channel volume) - first-order lowpass filter bleeding off treble frequencies above ~4.5kHz
Values of R25 and R26 reversed - increases available reverb mix on clean channel, decreases available reverb mix on both drive channels
Replace C36/C37 with higher voltage parts, i.e. 500V or 630V - for reliability, these caps fail if a power tube shorts plate or screen to control grid, then bias gets mysteriously dragged down and the problem is extremely difficult to locate.
Crunch PCB:
68pf mica cap added across VR2 (channel volume) - first-order lowpass filter bleeding off treble frequencies above ~4.5kHz
Other:
Mercury Magnetics MAR100-OM output transformer - bandwidth, headroom, reliability
Reverb tank replaced with Accutronics Type-9, 9BB3C1D - longer, more complex reverb sound
Notes:
Do NOT increase the size of interstage coupling caps if you downtune, it just makes the distortion farty.
Avoid strapping a cap across R1 on the mainboard for “fizz-reduction,” since it will affect all 3 channels, potentially making the clean channel sound dull.
DSL 100 Circuit Schematic http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...01)%20iss7.pdf
DSL 100 Tone Stack Schematic http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...01)%20iss5.pdf
TSL 100 Circuit Schematic http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...03)%20iss7.pdf
TSL 100 Lead Channel http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...98)%20iss4.pdf
TSL 100 Crunch Channel http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...98)%20iss2.pdf
TSL 100 Clean Channel http://www.drtube.com/schematics/mar...98)%20iss4.pdf
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