I know that a lot of old designs use can caps. I've repaired thousands of them. Despite the fact that they are again available, I would never use one in a new build.
Someone said they wanted to "get rid of the preamp filter cap all together". You can't. The purpose of that cap is MAINLY to decouple the stages, i.e. remove audio signals that get superimposed on the B+ line of a tube stage to keep them from leaking to other stages, causing unintentional feedback paths.
As far as grounding is concerned: I spent many sleepless nights debugging the grounding scheme in my main amp design that LOOKED technically perfect. Star-ground systems are not a panacea for grounding issues. Look at you typical BF amp, which are usually dead quiet. It is far from star grounding, but I am sure that Fender engineers worked hard on it.
For me, the key points with grounding are to keep the heater supply CT away from the preamp grounds, and essentially divide the grounding scheme into low-current/high-current. I view everything as celectron flow, which states that all current emanates from the LOW side of the circuit, ground in this case. If you were to ground your heaters to the same node as the 1st stage preamp ground, the heavy AC current draw of the heaters would enter the stage through the cathode and be amplified right along with the audio, and you would never see it entering the stage at the grid.
To me, Fender got it TOTALLY right with the BF amps, to wit, separate ALL stage grounds to avoid accidental coupling through the cathodes.
Someone said they wanted to "get rid of the preamp filter cap all together". You can't. The purpose of that cap is MAINLY to decouple the stages, i.e. remove audio signals that get superimposed on the B+ line of a tube stage to keep them from leaking to other stages, causing unintentional feedback paths.
As far as grounding is concerned: I spent many sleepless nights debugging the grounding scheme in my main amp design that LOOKED technically perfect. Star-ground systems are not a panacea for grounding issues. Look at you typical BF amp, which are usually dead quiet. It is far from star grounding, but I am sure that Fender engineers worked hard on it.
For me, the key points with grounding are to keep the heater supply CT away from the preamp grounds, and essentially divide the grounding scheme into low-current/high-current. I view everything as celectron flow, which states that all current emanates from the LOW side of the circuit, ground in this case. If you were to ground your heaters to the same node as the 1st stage preamp ground, the heavy AC current draw of the heaters would enter the stage through the cathode and be amplified right along with the audio, and you would never see it entering the stage at the grid.
To me, Fender got it TOTALLY right with the BF amps, to wit, separate ALL stage grounds to avoid accidental coupling through the cathodes.
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