Yesterday I was looking inside my Fender, which I find amazingly quiet, and meditating on it's grounding scheme. In some ways it seems like they did it wrong. All the high power grounds go straight into the chassis, no star grounding (that I recognize), input jacks are not isolated, carbon comp resistors... but it's quiet. I'm sure the layout was meticulously planned, in spite of it's appearance, and there are details other than grounding that obviously matter for noise, like they used shielded wire for preamp grids, full bypass on all the early stage cathodes, and the layout allows for very short wire runs from the preamp tube cathodes to their bias resistors, and probably other stuff I haven't noticed.
So my next two builds are a 5F2A and a PR, both with steel chassis, and I just bought a 300 Watt soldering gun I'm itching to try out
Should I:
bring my high current grounds to a star?
or solder them to the chassis like Fender?
What's your vote?
So my next two builds are a 5F2A and a PR, both with steel chassis, and I just bought a 300 Watt soldering gun I'm itching to try out
Should I:
bring my high current grounds to a star?
or solder them to the chassis like Fender?
What's your vote?
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