First the clip:
http://www.netmusicians.org/files/81...0Super%208.mp3
There's no word to describe the fun of playing through that amp!
With the gain down it's got all that sweet cathode-biased compression, with the gain up it sounds like a mean Marshall completely cranked!
All this at just the right volume to play with a moderately hitting drummer without being obnoxious.
It started like as a Firefly (from AX84)... I didn't like it. Still too loud to be cranked at home, but too quiet to be used as a backup on the road.
So I spent some times finding something else to do with those transformers (Hammond 269EX PT and 125C OT).
Until somebody here mentionned the 6K6 in another thread.
Quite search: exactly what I need!
Runs happily on the 268V I'm getting out of the PT, pulls just enough current to keep the PT working, and the OT (8W) is just on the verge of breakup. Perfect!
So at first I built it as a 5E3, except with SS rectifier, and a 400ohm cathode resistor and a 12Kohms primary (as per the 6K6GT spec sheet).
Fun but... I didn't really like it. I wanted more gain, and I didn't like the way this baby Deluxe sounded with a pedal in front. I play rock!
So I thought: let's split the cathode and cascade the 2 channels!
So what we have is:
High Input
V1a (Bright Channel): 2k5 cathode resistor, 0.1uF bypass cap (0.68uF was too big... I'm glad I tried 0.1, it sounds mean!), 0.022uF coupling cap
Low Input (taps between the bright and normal channel, like on a Marshall JCM800)
470k/470pF filter (like on a JCM800 2203)
1M gain pot (not treble cap)
V1b (Normal Channel): 2k5 cathode resistor, 25uF bypass cap, 0.022uF coupling
1M volume pot with tone pot exactly as per 5E3
From there it's a bone stock 5E3 with the cathodyne PI.
Except again: 400ohms (well, 410) cathode resistor, 12K primaries
Love this amp, love it!
Clip is through a dummy load, DI'ed into the computer, using Voxengo Boogex for cab sim (impulses). I spent the whole evening playing through this rig! I've never had such an amazing experience, sounds like playing through a cranked Superlead... through headphones!
Dummy load is home-made too. It's purely resistive. DI is simply a 220K resistor in serie with a 500k pot (the whole thing paralleled with the load), the DI out being fed from the wiper.
http://www.netmusicians.org/files/81...0Super%208.mp3
There's no word to describe the fun of playing through that amp!
With the gain down it's got all that sweet cathode-biased compression, with the gain up it sounds like a mean Marshall completely cranked!
All this at just the right volume to play with a moderately hitting drummer without being obnoxious.
It started like as a Firefly (from AX84)... I didn't like it. Still too loud to be cranked at home, but too quiet to be used as a backup on the road.
So I spent some times finding something else to do with those transformers (Hammond 269EX PT and 125C OT).
Until somebody here mentionned the 6K6 in another thread.
Quite search: exactly what I need!
Runs happily on the 268V I'm getting out of the PT, pulls just enough current to keep the PT working, and the OT (8W) is just on the verge of breakup. Perfect!
So at first I built it as a 5E3, except with SS rectifier, and a 400ohm cathode resistor and a 12Kohms primary (as per the 6K6GT spec sheet).
Fun but... I didn't really like it. I wanted more gain, and I didn't like the way this baby Deluxe sounded with a pedal in front. I play rock!
So I thought: let's split the cathode and cascade the 2 channels!
So what we have is:
High Input
V1a (Bright Channel): 2k5 cathode resistor, 0.1uF bypass cap (0.68uF was too big... I'm glad I tried 0.1, it sounds mean!), 0.022uF coupling cap
Low Input (taps between the bright and normal channel, like on a Marshall JCM800)
470k/470pF filter (like on a JCM800 2203)
1M gain pot (not treble cap)
V1b (Normal Channel): 2k5 cathode resistor, 25uF bypass cap, 0.022uF coupling
1M volume pot with tone pot exactly as per 5E3
From there it's a bone stock 5E3 with the cathodyne PI.
Except again: 400ohms (well, 410) cathode resistor, 12K primaries
Love this amp, love it!
Clip is through a dummy load, DI'ed into the computer, using Voxengo Boogex for cab sim (impulses). I spent the whole evening playing through this rig! I've never had such an amazing experience, sounds like playing through a cranked Superlead... through headphones!
Dummy load is home-made too. It's purely resistive. DI is simply a 220K resistor in serie with a 500k pot (the whole thing paralleled with the load), the DI out being fed from the wiper.
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