Adding small caps (20pf-50pf) to tube pins to help with oscillations and other problems. I always wondered what the difference was if you added a 20pf cap between the grid or plate to ground, or from the plate to B+. I would guess that the effect would be more pronounced from the grid to ground because of the gain in the stage. So depending on the gain you might need a 120pf cap across the plate resistor to have the same effect as a 20pf from the grid to ground. Is that true?
It seems to me that running a small cap between the plate and the grid would have a different effect as it would be a small local feedback loop. The Dumble .047uf cap and 22M resistor between the plate and ground of the 2nd stage in the non-HRM ODS's it seems to compress the signal a bit. So how would all of that apply to a 20pf (or 120pf) cap from the plate to the grid in a preamp gain stage?
Thanks!
Steve Ahola
P.S. With chassis mounted tube sockets I would just tack-solder the caps and observe the results but this is for the clean channel of my Mesa Boogie Maverick amp that I am rewiring as an AB763 SR and the pcb is packed to capacity (with there being 3 or 4 resistors or caps inside each of the preamp tube sockets so as to not waste real estate.)
It seems to me that running a small cap between the plate and the grid would have a different effect as it would be a small local feedback loop. The Dumble .047uf cap and 22M resistor between the plate and ground of the 2nd stage in the non-HRM ODS's it seems to compress the signal a bit. So how would all of that apply to a 20pf (or 120pf) cap from the plate to the grid in a preamp gain stage?
Thanks!
Steve Ahola
P.S. With chassis mounted tube sockets I would just tack-solder the caps and observe the results but this is for the clean channel of my Mesa Boogie Maverick amp that I am rewiring as an AB763 SR and the pcb is packed to capacity (with there being 3 or 4 resistors or caps inside each of the preamp tube sockets so as to not waste real estate.)
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