Originally posted by eschertron
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Supro build, more breakup.
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Westinghouse didn't have a factory in England as AFAIK. This is probably a Mullard rebrand. There was a lot of that going on back then, still is. The fact that you got the bias UP to -.76 helped as the -.49 was too low for the tube to get going. And you also found that NOS 6973 older tubes sound better. I have found this to be true in all my older amps I have rebuilt/modded. Just something about those '60 vintage tubes. I have found they don't make quite as much difference in newer, higher gain amps though. You might want to find some more Mullards. I have found used tubes are just as good as NOS most of the time. Those old tubes just seem to keep going and going.... Here is the way to tell if you have a Mullard. The "B" stands for Blackburn factory; Blackburn, England. That is the key. Tube enthusiast: know your tube codes. | Effectrode Glad the amp is giving it up for you.Turn it up so that everything is louder than everything else.
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Originally posted by Pryde View PostWell I think I will call this one resolved
I tried bypassing input resistor, it helped marginally with a bit more volume.
swapped in 1M input resistor to ground. Got some more volume and breakup but it was pretty harsh sounding so went back to 100k.
Got into my pile of NOS 12ax7s. Threw in another Amperex bugleboy and hey instantly some more breakup. On the right track I swapped in different ones with varying results until I put in an old Westinghouse (England made) and WOW there it is just like that. Actually it is getting probably a bit more breakup even than the video. Stays clean til 4/10 then starts breaking up great with fantastic compression and growl at 8/10. Sounds so nice I will leave it here.
The westinghouse is measuring -0.76v on the grid compared to -0.49v with the amperex. Apparently this is the sweet spot. Crazy I tried new production and a few NOS tubes with not great results then this old beat up one is a gold nugget
I appreciate all the great suggestions, the important thing is that I learned a good deal more about these funky grid bias preamps so for that I thank you.“If you have integrity, nothing else matters. If you don't have integrity, nothing else matters.”
-Alan K. Simpson, U.S. Senator, Wyoming, 1979-97
Hofstadter's Law: It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law.
https://sites.google.com/site/stringsandfrets/
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When the amp was designed, they were not into all this tube swapping for subtle tone nuance. They expected you could go to the drug store for a new tube, plug it in, and it should work. It ought NOT be tube sensitive. We swap preamp tubes all the time looking for the just so overdrive or whatever we so crave. But the amp still works reasonably with most any 12AX7.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by DRH1958 View PostWestinghouse didn't have a factory in England as AFAIK. This is probably a Mullard rebrand. There was a lot of that going on back then, still is. The fact that you got the bias UP to -.76 helped as the -.49 was too low for the tube to get going. And you also found that NOS 6973 older tubes sound better. I have found this to be true in all my older amps I have rebuilt/modded. Just something about those '60 vintage tubes. I have found they don't make quite as much difference in newer, higher gain amps though. You might want to find some more Mullards. I have found used tubes are just as good as NOS most of the time. Those old tubes just seem to keep going and going.... Here is the way to tell if you have a Mullard. The "B" stands for Blackburn factory; Blackburn, England. That is the key. Tube enthusiast: know your tube codes. | Effectrode Glad the amp is giving it up for you.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostWhen the amp was designed, they were not into all this tube swapping for subtle tone nuance. They expected you could go to the drug store for a new tube, plug it in, and it should work. It ought NOT be tube sensitive. We swap preamp tubes all the time looking for the just so overdrive or whatever we so crave. But the amp still works reasonably with most any 12AX7.
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