Hi everyone! Iīve been tried to solve the cross over distortion problem on my 18watt lite build I finished three weeks ago. I first did the "Paul Ruby mod" and it helped a lot, along with changing the cathode resistor on the EL84's from 150 to 120 ohm (biasing hotter). There still some buzz and I searched on the web some other method that could help with it. In the 18watt site, I read about the "huge cathode cap" method, consisting in changing the bypass cap of the cathode resitor on the power tubes for a big value one, like 1000uf or 2200uf, this theoretically reduces the voltage swing across the cathose resistor, so the bias wonīt cool that much, reducing the cross over distortion.
Today I tried that method, I changed back the cathode resitor to 150, so the bias won't get that hot, and put a 1000uf cap, I meassured the voltage swing and it was larger than before, with the 120R and the 47uf cap it was from 10V at idle to 15V at full signal with the guitar (hitting the strings real hard!), now it was from 11V to 18V, and the crossover distortion buzz was worse than before, so I tried a 2200uf cap and got the very same results. I cheked everything for some error like bad solder joints, reversed polarity in the caps, etc. but it was all OK.
Has somebody else here tried this method? Or does it really don't work at all?
Today I tried that method, I changed back the cathode resitor to 150, so the bias won't get that hot, and put a 1000uf cap, I meassured the voltage swing and it was larger than before, with the 120R and the 47uf cap it was from 10V at idle to 15V at full signal with the guitar (hitting the strings real hard!), now it was from 11V to 18V, and the crossover distortion buzz was worse than before, so I tried a 2200uf cap and got the very same results. I cheked everything for some error like bad solder joints, reversed polarity in the caps, etc. but it was all OK.
Has somebody else here tried this method? Or does it really don't work at all?
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