I finally freed up some time to try this mod on the Marshall MV preamp circuit below:
I really liked the sound of this circuit - kind of a combination of the best characteristics of SS-diode and tube distortion.
Here are some observations:
1) The coupling cap (C23) value can be made as large as you want. I settled on the stock .022uF, but I tried values up to .1uF. Without the Zener - and with the gain dimed - chords using the .1uF value sounded like fog horns with your head wrapped in wax paper but with the Zener in, increasing the coupling cap value just added more low mids and 'thickness' on single notes while chords stayed defined. Without the Zener circuit, I had to reduce C23 to .001uF to maintain chord definition, at which point single notes sounded very thin and trebly, and a lot of sustain went out the window.
2) I liked symmetrical clipping the best. In this circuit, that happened with the 5.1V Zener value shown; smaller Zener voltages gave more of a smooth compressed diode-clipping sound, while higher Zener values gave a more dynamic (i.e., touch-sensitive) overdrive, unfortunately also accompanied by muddiness on chords, excessive 'envelope', and splattering on hard-picked notes.
3) The Zener only operates about maybe 8 on the gain control. This allows you to eliminate the diode-clipping simply by reducing the gain.
When this circuit is used on a push-pull output stage, Zener conduction occurs only after tube cutoff, so Zener-diode clipping is never passed on to the speaker. This is not the case in a preamp tube; I definitely heard some characteristics of diode clipping, but I thought it really added sharpness and good-edge to the sound (every note I played made me think of Van Halen I), rather than just producing a buzzy mush like some diode-clipping circuits do. Only half the waveform is diode clipped - the other half shows the rounded edge of attempted grid conduction - and since the (5.1V) Zener-clipped half does not drive the 12AX7 into cutoff, it is passed on to the next stage where it gets some 'grid-conduction tube flavor' added on.
This is not really a blues-overdrive circuit - more hard rock/metal - but for that usage I was pretty impressed, and it definitely has more gain than any other 3-12AX7-GS circuit I've played through.
Ray
I really liked the sound of this circuit - kind of a combination of the best characteristics of SS-diode and tube distortion.
Here are some observations:
1) The coupling cap (C23) value can be made as large as you want. I settled on the stock .022uF, but I tried values up to .1uF. Without the Zener - and with the gain dimed - chords using the .1uF value sounded like fog horns with your head wrapped in wax paper but with the Zener in, increasing the coupling cap value just added more low mids and 'thickness' on single notes while chords stayed defined. Without the Zener circuit, I had to reduce C23 to .001uF to maintain chord definition, at which point single notes sounded very thin and trebly, and a lot of sustain went out the window.
2) I liked symmetrical clipping the best. In this circuit, that happened with the 5.1V Zener value shown; smaller Zener voltages gave more of a smooth compressed diode-clipping sound, while higher Zener values gave a more dynamic (i.e., touch-sensitive) overdrive, unfortunately also accompanied by muddiness on chords, excessive 'envelope', and splattering on hard-picked notes.
3) The Zener only operates about maybe 8 on the gain control. This allows you to eliminate the diode-clipping simply by reducing the gain.
When this circuit is used on a push-pull output stage, Zener conduction occurs only after tube cutoff, so Zener-diode clipping is never passed on to the speaker. This is not the case in a preamp tube; I definitely heard some characteristics of diode clipping, but I thought it really added sharpness and good-edge to the sound (every note I played made me think of Van Halen I), rather than just producing a buzzy mush like some diode-clipping circuits do. Only half the waveform is diode clipped - the other half shows the rounded edge of attempted grid conduction - and since the (5.1V) Zener-clipped half does not drive the 12AX7 into cutoff, it is passed on to the next stage where it gets some 'grid-conduction tube flavor' added on.
This is not really a blues-overdrive circuit - more hard rock/metal - but for that usage I was pretty impressed, and it definitely has more gain than any other 3-12AX7-GS circuit I've played through.
Ray
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