The new Custom Classic serie Vox AC30s have this: a little switch on the back allows to switch between two levels of filtering, I believe one is the "vintage correct" value, the other is a bit higher therefore tighter (from memory, it's between 22uF and 33uF but I could be wrong).
I very much liked what it does and I'd like to implement it on my Plexi-ish build since I sometimes do "heavier" gigs and need something tighter.
I guess I can simply add, say a 50/50uf can, and put it in and out of the circuit with a switch, one half before the EL34 plates and another one at the PI (maybe some experimenting here for the best places and values).
I'm a bit afraid though: with the switch open, it would see a 400V+ potential across it all the time the amp is on. Sure Standby switches do the same, but those are more often in a closed position, this one could spent hours and hours in the open position. Also, closing the circuit would generate a short current burst while the cap charges, which may or may not be a big deal.
I thought about maybe putting a big resistor (say 220K or 470K) in serie with the cap and putting the switch accross it. This way, the cap would charge slowly, reducing the voltage accross the switch until it is almost nil. Then closing the switch would bypass the resistor so the capacitor can start doing its work without having to charge first.
Anyone has thoughts on this? Sounds like a cool idea.
Thanks!
I very much liked what it does and I'd like to implement it on my Plexi-ish build since I sometimes do "heavier" gigs and need something tighter.
I guess I can simply add, say a 50/50uf can, and put it in and out of the circuit with a switch, one half before the EL34 plates and another one at the PI (maybe some experimenting here for the best places and values).
I'm a bit afraid though: with the switch open, it would see a 400V+ potential across it all the time the amp is on. Sure Standby switches do the same, but those are more often in a closed position, this one could spent hours and hours in the open position. Also, closing the circuit would generate a short current burst while the cap charges, which may or may not be a big deal.
I thought about maybe putting a big resistor (say 220K or 470K) in serie with the cap and putting the switch accross it. This way, the cap would charge slowly, reducing the voltage accross the switch until it is almost nil. Then closing the switch would bypass the resistor so the capacitor can start doing its work without having to charge first.
Anyone has thoughts on this? Sounds like a cool idea.
Thanks!
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