Recently I got a bit tired of the highly overdriven (using a boost up front) 'Glassy' and what I term 'Hairy' distortion from my Gretsch 6162 amp (See Schematic). The amp has a rather unusual tone circuit that is represented as a hexagon on the below schematic.
http://www.oldfrets.com/Valco/Schema...retsch6162.pdf
At first, I added grid stopper resistors figuring it was blocking distortion, then filtered out the lowest bass (below 80hz) using smaller coupling caps and smaller cathode bypass caps, and used a Boss PQ-3B equalizer on the input. The problem still persisted, regardless of what I did, including swapping every tube.
I got the idea to bypass the tone circuit from Rob Robinette's wonderful guitar amp website, and now the amp now sounds MUCH better and smoother when driving it with a high gain clean boost. I use a parametric EQ up front to shape the tone, and it's much smoother in the balance without the tone circuit, no question about it, and the amp has become very useful for the garden variety of hard rock I play.
Any thoughts as to what may be the issue with the tone circuit ? It uses all ceramic caps (amp from 1964) so I would imagine they are still in good shape. I should be satisfied with the outcome of all this, and I can install a switch to kill the jumper if I chose to go back to the original tone control in circuit... But it bugs me that I never found out what was causing the nasty sounding distortion in the first place.
The 6973 tubes are not burnt like many are, and definitely not red-plating as I set the bias right at 12 watts each tube. I also used the output transformer shunt method to measure the 6973 tube bias, and they are both very close to 12 watts plate dissipation. The RCA 12AX7s are also all good, and I did spend a great deal of time swapping all of the tubes from end to end in the amp.
Any thoughts as to what may have been happening with the tone circuit are greatly appreciated ! The Tone circuit is an odd one, at least to me.
http://www.oldfrets.com/Valco/Schema...retsch6162.pdf
At first, I added grid stopper resistors figuring it was blocking distortion, then filtered out the lowest bass (below 80hz) using smaller coupling caps and smaller cathode bypass caps, and used a Boss PQ-3B equalizer on the input. The problem still persisted, regardless of what I did, including swapping every tube.
I got the idea to bypass the tone circuit from Rob Robinette's wonderful guitar amp website, and now the amp now sounds MUCH better and smoother when driving it with a high gain clean boost. I use a parametric EQ up front to shape the tone, and it's much smoother in the balance without the tone circuit, no question about it, and the amp has become very useful for the garden variety of hard rock I play.
Any thoughts as to what may be the issue with the tone circuit ? It uses all ceramic caps (amp from 1964) so I would imagine they are still in good shape. I should be satisfied with the outcome of all this, and I can install a switch to kill the jumper if I chose to go back to the original tone control in circuit... But it bugs me that I never found out what was causing the nasty sounding distortion in the first place.
The 6973 tubes are not burnt like many are, and definitely not red-plating as I set the bias right at 12 watts each tube. I also used the output transformer shunt method to measure the 6973 tube bias, and they are both very close to 12 watts plate dissipation. The RCA 12AX7s are also all good, and I did spend a great deal of time swapping all of the tubes from end to end in the amp.
Any thoughts as to what may have been happening with the tone circuit are greatly appreciated ! The Tone circuit is an odd one, at least to me.
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