What you propose with the PI to the wipers should work fine. I've never done this myself but I suggested it to a poster that wanted to use this type of master volume for an amp with cathode bias and a bias wiggle tremolo. He wired the PPIMV like below to keep it from interfering with the tremolo circuit. He reported that it worked just fine. It's going to load the PI outputs quite a bit at low master settings and that might affect the low end, symmetry and the clipped wave form a little when driving the PI hard. But it shouldn't cause the distortion you describe. I think it's possible you had something else wired differently.
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"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
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I reversed the leads on the dual pot. I put the leads from the phase inverter caps on the pot wipers, and put the leads that go to the output tube grid stoppers on the first lugs of the pot.- Own Opinions Only -
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostThis way you are shorting the PI outputs at low MV setting, which makes the PI distort. Wired correctly as voltage divider the loads to the PI remain constant.
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I put the leads from the phase inverter caps on the pot wipers, and put the leads that go to the output tube grid stoppers on the first lugs of the pot.
As with turning down the MV the load resistance to the coupling caps strongly decreases, the lower corner frequency shifts from maybe 25Hz to e.g. 120Hz. So bass content reduces at lower settings. May be desirable - or not.- Own Opinions Only -
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Those MV is not "transparent" and think no one will be. But is great useful tool even for bedroom levels. Put it into max position and restore the amp in factory condition. I installed tens in marshall amps, never get customer disappointed. Build an simple Airbrake atenuator and together with this MV can get any tones of a Marshall can do but at decent practice level."If it measures good and sounds bad, it is bad. If it measures bad and sounds good, you are measuring the wrong things."
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostThere is another effect involved with this kind of MV wiring.
As with turning down the MV the load resistance to the coupling caps strongly decreases, the lower corner frequency shifts from maybe 25Hz to e.g. 120Hz. So bass content reduces at lower settings. May be desirable - or not.
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