So, I was thinking about this some more after having confirmed in the videos above that the oscillation happens with speakers and with a dummy load, regardless of using single coils or humbuckers, etc., again, as long as the volume of the guitar, volume of the amp as well presence and treble are maxed or pretty high. At the end of the day, since I get oscillation without playing the strings, there has to be some signal present at the output which then gets picked up by the guitar, fed back to the amp, and then starts the oscillation. The only signal present would have to be noise, right? In looking at the output of the amp with an oscilloscope, with the guitar volume down all the way and with all amp controls down all the way except the volume, there is not much evidence of noise. If I max the middle pot, I see some noise. If I lower it again and max the presence, I don't see any noise. If I lower the presence and max the treble, there is significantly more noise compared to when the middle pot was maxed (something like 12-20mV at the speaker jack), but if I leave the treble maxed and max the presence, the noise is significantly higher (at 35-50mV or so) than with just the treble. Would it be a logical conclusion that the noise present at the output with the volume, treble and presence controls up high, is sufficiently high so that when I bring the volume up on the guitar and get close to the OT or even the speaker jack where it connects to the dummy load, there is enough strength in this noise signal to get picked up by the guitar pickups? Further, since a pickup generates a current by having its magnetic field "disturbed", does that mean that it is therefore electromagnetic radiation from the OT or speaker jack (caused by the noise) that is causing the pickup to send a signal down the guitar chord back to the amp?
If these are valid conclusions, then is the solution perhaps to try and lower the noise in the amp (if at all possible)? I already have metal film resistors for the input jack 1M and 68k resistors, but everything else is carbon comp. I don't know how much the contribute vs. capacitors and the tubes themselves.
Does any of this make sense?
If these are valid conclusions, then is the solution perhaps to try and lower the noise in the amp (if at all possible)? I already have metal film resistors for the input jack 1M and 68k resistors, but everything else is carbon comp. I don't know how much the contribute vs. capacitors and the tubes themselves.
Does any of this make sense?
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