I was reading through some of the old threads, and ran across This One that got me curious. I didn't want to revive the older thread, just a quick clarification, to make sure I understand this.
Post #1 says "and have heard that lifting the resistor to ground on the bass pot will effectively take the tone stack out of the circuit, and result in such an increase. Is this the case?"
And was said to be correct in post #2, which I don't doubt.
I have a 74 Champ, don't want to seriously mod the thing, but a bit more gain might prove interesting, so if I understand this correctly, it's just saying desolder the resistor on the bass pot from ground, and that's it? I know it won't hurt the amp to leave it in place but disconnected, that's not the question, but will it work to begin with, if disconnected in this manner. I don't want to do anything until I know what to expect...
I won't be even looking at it for a few days, right now I'm fighting a case of this year's strain of flu, I don't even want to look at it, much less open it up. Considering the voltages in there, it's just a bad idea...
And another clarification, if you guys would be so kind. I've tried to check this, and I find no voltage so...before ever opening up my Super Reverb I wasn't sure how to go about draining the filter caps, which is a must, but ran across some info that says if you unplug the amp while playing, pull the plug, NOT flip the power switch, and keep it playing until it makes no more sound at all, it should drain the caps. That's how I drain the power in computers (very similar anyway) when I need to drain them to work on them, I know it works for that purpose, but that's not 400VDC or more...computers run on 5 and 12VDC at best. When I do this with my amps I can't find a volt anywhere, so apparently it does work, but I'm still wondering if I'm just missing it somewhere. I've been really careful, never been shocked, and have put my multimeter on both Champ and Super Reverb every time, can't find any voltage at filter caps or anywhere else. Is it really drained though??? I've checked both terminals to ground and both terminals across the caps, one cap to the next, every way I can think of, never a thing. No voltage at any point in the amp.
Or can anybody explain in plain English how to do it with a resistor and jumper wire. I've seen that many times, but none of them seem to speak redneck... One of my biggest problems is I don't understand a lot of the terminology. It took me a week to figure out when someone said "lift it from ground" it meant just disconnect the damn thing from the chassis...I finally found a site with a good explanation of what the basic amp sections are, I had no idea what the "phase inverter section" was until I found a good site with 8x10 color glossy photographs with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each...no, wait...
OK I'm all better now...
A site with a board layout and each section marked. But I still have to refer back to that, it's not all memorized yet, so it's still baby steps here...but will that actually do a decent job of draining power? Or have I Just been lucky...
Post #1 says "and have heard that lifting the resistor to ground on the bass pot will effectively take the tone stack out of the circuit, and result in such an increase. Is this the case?"
And was said to be correct in post #2, which I don't doubt.
I have a 74 Champ, don't want to seriously mod the thing, but a bit more gain might prove interesting, so if I understand this correctly, it's just saying desolder the resistor on the bass pot from ground, and that's it? I know it won't hurt the amp to leave it in place but disconnected, that's not the question, but will it work to begin with, if disconnected in this manner. I don't want to do anything until I know what to expect...
I won't be even looking at it for a few days, right now I'm fighting a case of this year's strain of flu, I don't even want to look at it, much less open it up. Considering the voltages in there, it's just a bad idea...
And another clarification, if you guys would be so kind. I've tried to check this, and I find no voltage so...before ever opening up my Super Reverb I wasn't sure how to go about draining the filter caps, which is a must, but ran across some info that says if you unplug the amp while playing, pull the plug, NOT flip the power switch, and keep it playing until it makes no more sound at all, it should drain the caps. That's how I drain the power in computers (very similar anyway) when I need to drain them to work on them, I know it works for that purpose, but that's not 400VDC or more...computers run on 5 and 12VDC at best. When I do this with my amps I can't find a volt anywhere, so apparently it does work, but I'm still wondering if I'm just missing it somewhere. I've been really careful, never been shocked, and have put my multimeter on both Champ and Super Reverb every time, can't find any voltage at filter caps or anywhere else. Is it really drained though??? I've checked both terminals to ground and both terminals across the caps, one cap to the next, every way I can think of, never a thing. No voltage at any point in the amp.
Or can anybody explain in plain English how to do it with a resistor and jumper wire. I've seen that many times, but none of them seem to speak redneck... One of my biggest problems is I don't understand a lot of the terminology. It took me a week to figure out when someone said "lift it from ground" it meant just disconnect the damn thing from the chassis...I finally found a site with a good explanation of what the basic amp sections are, I had no idea what the "phase inverter section" was until I found a good site with 8x10 color glossy photographs with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each...no, wait...
OK I'm all better now...
A site with a board layout and each section marked. But I still have to refer back to that, it's not all memorized yet, so it's still baby steps here...but will that actually do a decent job of draining power? Or have I Just been lucky...
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