A guy asked me to rebuild the normal channel of his much-messed about sf Bassman into a vibroking preamp - leaving the bass inst channel as it was (he plays bass through it sometimes) but with the deep switch on permanently.
Different power supply, but not too different. No nfb in the VK - so put it on a switch - feasible, I thought, and so I did the job and it worked. Only compromise was a couple of 220k mixer resistors and a simplified switchable nfb circuit. Bright switch became fat switch.
I'm very struck by the tonal differences of these preamps running through the same power amp. The VK sounds much more aggressive and 'present', and at around 4 it is very touch-sensitive. A satisfying amp to play.
So what's good about the VK? Three stages before the tone controls is one unusual thing. And the first stage, which holds some mysteries for me, is fairly unusual too - cathode-follower to amplify current, ok, and also what I guess is grid-leak bias? Why is this stage built this way? Anyone like to further my education?
Different power supply, but not too different. No nfb in the VK - so put it on a switch - feasible, I thought, and so I did the job and it worked. Only compromise was a couple of 220k mixer resistors and a simplified switchable nfb circuit. Bright switch became fat switch.
I'm very struck by the tonal differences of these preamps running through the same power amp. The VK sounds much more aggressive and 'present', and at around 4 it is very touch-sensitive. A satisfying amp to play.
So what's good about the VK? Three stages before the tone controls is one unusual thing. And the first stage, which holds some mysteries for me, is fairly unusual too - cathode-follower to amplify current, ok, and also what I guess is grid-leak bias? Why is this stage built this way? Anyone like to further my education?
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