In the past, I've usually shunted tone shaping circuits to ground, such as tonestacks, snd have only used B+ for shunting signal in the form of using a small "smoothing capacitor" across a plate resistor. I think I've read somewhere that a change in output impedance is associated with shunting to B+ as opposed to ground, and someone on this forum (I forget who) praised using B+ instead of ground, and so I thought I might as well try it out and see how it sounds.
I don't have a typical fender style tone stack, and instead use several tonestacks throughout the preamp, but I've sent them all to B+ instead of ground (using caps to block DC where necessary), and have also conected cathode bypass caps to B+ instead of ground (using high voltage voltage caps).
My first impression with all this is that is sounds great! I did it all one cap or tone circuit at a time, to see what role each cap has, and the sound to my ears just kept getting better. Clearer, more beautiful. Even overdriven tones. I connected the tone circuits back to ground, and there was a nticeable increase in "deadness" to the tone, so I connected it all back to B+ again.
Any body else try these kind of things, or would like to shed some light of the principles at work here?
One thing I should add is that the power supply for my preamp is a kindof star-power supply, so each pair of 12ax7 stages has its own power supply tap off of the B+ ( where the EL34 screens get their voltage), and I shunt the tone circuits to the high voltage side of the plate resistor from which the signal came.
I don't have a typical fender style tone stack, and instead use several tonestacks throughout the preamp, but I've sent them all to B+ instead of ground (using caps to block DC where necessary), and have also conected cathode bypass caps to B+ instead of ground (using high voltage voltage caps).
My first impression with all this is that is sounds great! I did it all one cap or tone circuit at a time, to see what role each cap has, and the sound to my ears just kept getting better. Clearer, more beautiful. Even overdriven tones. I connected the tone circuits back to ground, and there was a nticeable increase in "deadness" to the tone, so I connected it all back to B+ again.
Any body else try these kind of things, or would like to shed some light of the principles at work here?
One thing I should add is that the power supply for my preamp is a kindof star-power supply, so each pair of 12ax7 stages has its own power supply tap off of the B+ ( where the EL34 screens get their voltage), and I shunt the tone circuits to the high voltage side of the plate resistor from which the signal came.
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