I was typing when you posted last.
You can draw this any number of ways. You can leave out either or both caps, or include both. The caps can be a wide range of values. The cap to ground should be small. 100pf? sure. why not. I'd probably make it smaller, like 22pf, 39pf, 47pf, to name common values. We just don;t want it large enough to affect audio. The series cap? it needs to be large enough to pass the entire audio band down below the bottom end of guitar.
I see the resistors and caps as separate issues. The circuit works without the caps, but they add their function if you want it. You have the small cap to ground from the left end of the grid stopper, your Merlin drawing has it on the right end, the grid end. Either way works. And as mentioned before, you canhave the 1 meg on either end of the grid stopper.
I think the C10 analysis is off.
Grounding won't put B+ on the guitar. Anything is possible, but in the highly unlikely event of the tube shorting plate to grid, THEN you could see B+ through the plate resistance going to the guitar, but the guitar is not an open circuit, it would be shunting that voltage to chassis itself.
By the way, "after" is confusing me here. Generally we use the term after to represent farther along the signal path. I THINK you mean farther from the tube though. As in to the left on the drawing. We usually draw signal path left to right, so for example the tube grid is after R16. C10 is before R16.
If you move R25 to the other end of C10, you will no longer have a ground reference for the tube grid, it will float and cause problems. SOldering the 1 meg to the jack is indeed common, but only in amps with no series cap.
You can draw this any number of ways. You can leave out either or both caps, or include both. The caps can be a wide range of values. The cap to ground should be small. 100pf? sure. why not. I'd probably make it smaller, like 22pf, 39pf, 47pf, to name common values. We just don;t want it large enough to affect audio. The series cap? it needs to be large enough to pass the entire audio band down below the bottom end of guitar.
I see the resistors and caps as separate issues. The circuit works without the caps, but they add their function if you want it. You have the small cap to ground from the left end of the grid stopper, your Merlin drawing has it on the right end, the grid end. Either way works. And as mentioned before, you canhave the 1 meg on either end of the grid stopper.
I think the C10 analysis is off.
Also C10 can save your life if you have a faulty ground in the amp (then all B+ goes to the guitar if there isn't a capacitor between you and the amp).
By the way, "after" is confusing me here. Generally we use the term after to represent farther along the signal path. I THINK you mean farther from the tube though. As in to the left on the drawing. We usually draw signal path left to right, so for example the tube grid is after R16. C10 is before R16.
If you move R25 to the other end of C10, you will no longer have a ground reference for the tube grid, it will float and cause problems. SOldering the 1 meg to the jack is indeed common, but only in amps with no series cap.
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