I'm interested in making a switchable negative feedback mod for my Marshall JVM410 so that I can toggle between stock, no negative feedback at all, and the amount of feedback employed by the 2203 master volume. A permanent negative feedback mod has been done countless times by others but I wonder if their calculations are off? The JVM comes as stock with an 82k resistor connected to the 16ohm tap, whereas the 2203 has a 100k resistor connected to the 4ohm tap. The suggested mod by all the JVM guys is to change out the stock resistor for one valued at 176k, but is this right? Unless I'm wrong (which someone here will surely tell me quickly enough) the voltage at the 16ohm tap is double that at the 4ohm tap? In which case you would need a 200k resistor at the 16ohm tap to deliver the same amount of negative feedback as that of a 100k resistor at the 4ohm tap?
Now I don't intend to swap out the stock resistor. I intend to splice the wiring and add an on-off-on switch to give me the choice of either bringing in another resistor in series to raise the total value, or to have no negative feedback at all.
Now I don't intend to swap out the stock resistor. I intend to splice the wiring and add an on-off-on switch to give me the choice of either bringing in another resistor in series to raise the total value, or to have no negative feedback at all.
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