Hi guys,
I have a bit annoying problem with my Marshall "baby" Major build. I use Hammond 378CX PT and 1650R OT with pair of KT88's and B+ around 540-560V.
The prob is that I have removed the concertina and used that half of 12ax7 as an effects loop return stage. This means also that instead of the later paraphase boost stages I have used common type LTP (with 12BH7) which just seem not to give enough output/volume/swing for the UL.
Today I removed the LPT and (as a test) put in a direct-coupled gain stage and concertina splitter instead (plus added IRF820 cathode follower on the anode side of concertina). The result: I sure got all the volume back (and some more) but didn't quite like the sound. Especially the leads were kinda "dry" and too tight in a bad way without the sustain character which were there before. I found myself wondering if this drier tone was because it was cathode follower driven (grid current in action?) and would the sound be similar with the interstate transformer too?
Now I'm tinkering what should I try next. The original tone with 12BH7 parapahase boost stages was just right. Should I install one more 12ax7 (have already three channels with 8 12a_7's in there) only for concertina and wire it also as parallel-consertina to get both halves in use.
Other possibilities or chances without adding a tube? Could there be a transistor based paraphase amplifier before the 12BH7 boost stages? Or wiring the 12BH7 in parallel and use an interstage tranformer. (Any examples how to actually wire this things up?) I have a chanche to get Lundahl's
here. Triode Electronics sell also universal interstage transformer UIS-1, is this good stuff? http://store.triodestore.com/unintrui.html
Ok, hope to get some thought and tips from here, but please remember that I'm WAY more musician (and preamp tone tweaker) than deeply involved in electronics or engineering stuff.
Greets,
Mikko
I have a bit annoying problem with my Marshall "baby" Major build. I use Hammond 378CX PT and 1650R OT with pair of KT88's and B+ around 540-560V.
The prob is that I have removed the concertina and used that half of 12ax7 as an effects loop return stage. This means also that instead of the later paraphase boost stages I have used common type LTP (with 12BH7) which just seem not to give enough output/volume/swing for the UL.
Today I removed the LPT and (as a test) put in a direct-coupled gain stage and concertina splitter instead (plus added IRF820 cathode follower on the anode side of concertina). The result: I sure got all the volume back (and some more) but didn't quite like the sound. Especially the leads were kinda "dry" and too tight in a bad way without the sustain character which were there before. I found myself wondering if this drier tone was because it was cathode follower driven (grid current in action?) and would the sound be similar with the interstate transformer too?
Now I'm tinkering what should I try next. The original tone with 12BH7 parapahase boost stages was just right. Should I install one more 12ax7 (have already three channels with 8 12a_7's in there) only for concertina and wire it also as parallel-consertina to get both halves in use.
Other possibilities or chances without adding a tube? Could there be a transistor based paraphase amplifier before the 12BH7 boost stages? Or wiring the 12BH7 in parallel and use an interstage tranformer. (Any examples how to actually wire this things up?) I have a chanche to get Lundahl's
here. Triode Electronics sell also universal interstage transformer UIS-1, is this good stuff? http://store.triodestore.com/unintrui.html
Ok, hope to get some thought and tips from here, but please remember that I'm WAY more musician (and preamp tone tweaker) than deeply involved in electronics or engineering stuff.
Greets,
Mikko
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