We shouldn't dance around it, we should bite the bullet and put an isolation transformer where the 120vAC comes in. Then the cap is no longer a death cap, or you could just ground the circuit common.
If all you do is install a grounded power cord, your entire circuit is still hot to the AC mains. The fact yu have the input transformer doesn't change that.
As to the amp itself, I don't know that that input transformers is doing you any favors, especially at 600 ohms. As an experiment, try disconnecting the BL-WH wire from the volume control and putting your guitar input there. Just like any other guitar amp. See how that sounds. I don't know this amp, but if it was made for telephone use, remember the phone has a range of like 300Hz to 3kHz.
If I were going to make it more guitar friendly, I might look at the dual triode input stage. The triodes are in parallel. It would not be hard to wire them separate, one feeding the other. That would give you more gain through the amp. ALso a cathode bypass cap would as well.
And certainly experiment with speakers.
If all you do is install a grounded power cord, your entire circuit is still hot to the AC mains. The fact yu have the input transformer doesn't change that.
As to the amp itself, I don't know that that input transformers is doing you any favors, especially at 600 ohms. As an experiment, try disconnecting the BL-WH wire from the volume control and putting your guitar input there. Just like any other guitar amp. See how that sounds. I don't know this amp, but if it was made for telephone use, remember the phone has a range of like 300Hz to 3kHz.
If I were going to make it more guitar friendly, I might look at the dual triode input stage. The triodes are in parallel. It would not be hard to wire them separate, one feeding the other. That would give you more gain through the amp. ALso a cathode bypass cap would as well.
And certainly experiment with speakers.
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