Test #1!
Hello everybody,
First of all, I'd like to thank everyone who has provided advice so far. It has really helped fill in the gaps. Soooo I got the amp soldered up and turned it on, and it worked! Well, kinda. It did amplify sound from the input!
Hello everybody,
First of all, I'd like to thank everyone who has provided advice so far. It has really helped fill in the gaps. Soooo I got the amp soldered up and turned it on, and it worked! Well, kinda. It did amplify sound from the input!
More than what what many of us achieved on first build
Upon taking some real world measurements, as you guys said, the voltages were low. I updated my schematic below with the voltages I got in bold. The one I really don't understand is the 96v at the plate of the first stage, when the second has 174v? I plan on lowering my dropping resistor setup to around 1500R in order to get 300+ at the first takeoff point.
In the second stage it roughly matches, difference is attributable to measuring error; but first stage values are impossible as shown.
So probably:
1) stage 1 resistors are wrong value (either 100k is actually larger or 1k5 is lower)
or
2) miswired tone control which is AC isolated (all paths have a series cap somewhere) is actually pulling DC from plate 1, lowering voltages
or
3) somehow power formtube 1 is taken from tube 2 plate so it will work, but we start with much lower voltage than expected
or
4) 1 or more of above
The tone stack did not work as expected. The volume and treble seem to do ok, but the bass doesn't seem to do much at all.
To boot in classic Fender it's set too low in frequency so if you are testing with a relatively small, bass shy speaker, it appears to have very little efect.
Set Treble to 0 and move Bass from 0 to 10 ... any change?.
I may follow Tony's advice and omit the tone controls for now. But at the same time I would like to understand why it did not work. Maybe it is because I'm not using the special pots they used in the Champ tone circuit, maybe I just don't have it wired correctly(probably).
Also, there is a prevalent 60hz hum that gets louder and quieter with volume adjustment. I think referencing the filament circuit to ground will get this under control, I hope.
Present everywhere and hard to explain.
Often you ground here and have lots of hum, move there, 1 inch away and you do not.
Oh well.
I look forward to get everybody's thoughts on the results of my first test run!
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