I have been mulling over building a valve acoustic guitar preamp with a circuit layout like the classic 59 Bassman. It must roll off low frequencies from 150 Hz down and yet hopefully fill out the tone of a piezo pickup. Therefore I don't want to thin out the preamp too much. The cathode resistors will be 1.5K, 100K plate resistors and the two primary triodes will be blended into the post-volume triode with a CF tone stack. My actual question:
I can either chose smaller-value cathode bypass caps like a 10uF or 4.7uF (the 4.7's tend to be a bit bright, but I can do) and choose a coupling cap like a .0047 or .01uF or
I can use a larger bypass cap like a 25uF and choose a small-value coupling cap like a .0022uf or .001uF.
This is essentially the same thing many of you face when trying to keep the flabbiness out of your overdrive channels. I was wondering which approach you favor.
I sincerely appreciate your input as I think this will be an interesting exercise.
Regards, BTF.
I can either chose smaller-value cathode bypass caps like a 10uF or 4.7uF (the 4.7's tend to be a bit bright, but I can do) and choose a coupling cap like a .0047 or .01uF or
I can use a larger bypass cap like a 25uF and choose a small-value coupling cap like a .0022uf or .001uF.
This is essentially the same thing many of you face when trying to keep the flabbiness out of your overdrive channels. I was wondering which approach you favor.
I sincerely appreciate your input as I think this will be an interesting exercise.
Regards, BTF.
Comment