Just read a very interesting article that discusses the role 60 and 120 cycle hum in a guitar amp play in the generation of intermodulation distortion and discordance in a distorted amp.
I believe I solved just such an issue in my Gretsch 6162 amplifier by reducing the hum (both 60 and 120 cycle) at a few points in the circuit. 6162 schematic http://www.prowessamplifiers.com/sch...tsch_6162.html
First I would like to say that I play a rather large range of cover music, and that requires everything my amp can muster, from near perfectly clean, to highly distorted tones.
First thing I did to reduce hum was to increase the size of the V1 Cathode Bypass cap. Normally I would never go super big, but in this case I did at 220UF, and it paid off big in reducing hum. I also tried many different 12AX7 tubes in V1 and V4 (second preamp stage) until I found the ones with the lowest leakage hum. Same with using different 6973 tubes until I got a pair that played nice with less hum. Next I swapped out the 6EU7 PI tube (online schematic is wrong) for a more conventional 12AX7 (like the one used in the schematic) using an adapter. I am not sure if the new 12AX7 tube itself reduced hum, or if it was the change in the PI tubes orientation (higher up away from the very close power transformer) that reduced the hum. I also made sure I filtered as much of the below 80hz signal as I could in the amp circuit by choosing the correct combination of High pass filtration along the way, starting at just after the input.
All this has led to the amp sounding much smoother in very high gain. Finally, I bypassed the rather peculiar Tone control in the amp, in favor of using a Parametric EQ in front of the input, and that has also worked quite well, but no change in hum.
What does everyone here think about the content of the below article, specifically Section #4 that deals with Power Filtration ? Should I use a larger cap than the stock 20uf one currently in the amp (perhaps 40uf), or should I just leave well enough alone ?
Thank you for your help !
Article :
http://sound.whsites.net/valves/clipping.html#s4
I believe I solved just such an issue in my Gretsch 6162 amplifier by reducing the hum (both 60 and 120 cycle) at a few points in the circuit. 6162 schematic http://www.prowessamplifiers.com/sch...tsch_6162.html
First I would like to say that I play a rather large range of cover music, and that requires everything my amp can muster, from near perfectly clean, to highly distorted tones.
First thing I did to reduce hum was to increase the size of the V1 Cathode Bypass cap. Normally I would never go super big, but in this case I did at 220UF, and it paid off big in reducing hum. I also tried many different 12AX7 tubes in V1 and V4 (second preamp stage) until I found the ones with the lowest leakage hum. Same with using different 6973 tubes until I got a pair that played nice with less hum. Next I swapped out the 6EU7 PI tube (online schematic is wrong) for a more conventional 12AX7 (like the one used in the schematic) using an adapter. I am not sure if the new 12AX7 tube itself reduced hum, or if it was the change in the PI tubes orientation (higher up away from the very close power transformer) that reduced the hum. I also made sure I filtered as much of the below 80hz signal as I could in the amp circuit by choosing the correct combination of High pass filtration along the way, starting at just after the input.
All this has led to the amp sounding much smoother in very high gain. Finally, I bypassed the rather peculiar Tone control in the amp, in favor of using a Parametric EQ in front of the input, and that has also worked quite well, but no change in hum.
What does everyone here think about the content of the below article, specifically Section #4 that deals with Power Filtration ? Should I use a larger cap than the stock 20uf one currently in the amp (perhaps 40uf), or should I just leave well enough alone ?
Thank you for your help !
Article :
http://sound.whsites.net/valves/clipping.html#s4
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