Recently I've been trying to extract as much lower Bass as I could from the power section of my smaller amps, figuring if some bass is good, then more would be better !
Well I think I caught myself "Over doing" it once again, this time it has to do with adding a huge Cathode Bypass cap to the power tubes in a push pull 6V6 amp setup (amp has a single 12" Jensen speaker).
I learned that you can get away with a huge caps on single preamp tubes (as in 470uf 50v) to reduce hum, by creating a kind of short to dump the heater noise to ground. I figured a large cap might be good for the push pull power section as well, to get that last bit of low end... But it seems I caused an obnoxious swirly noise on the decay of low, and very high gain power chords. I just noticed this effect tonight, and it was driving me nuts as to why that was happening, as all seemed well with the amp for the last month or so, playing at lower gain settings.
The clue came when I backed off the bass settings severely using a stomp box EQ, and the nasty sound lessened quite a bit, so on a hunch I removed the huge cathode bypass cap I had added from the power tubes all together, and that seems to have fixed it, the nasty sound is gone !
So I am going to give myself the same advice I routinely give others, don't try to achieve unnatural levels of bass from your smallish amp. If you need a "Bigger" sound with more bass, hook up your amp to a bigger multi speaker cabinet, with perhaps bigger speakers with more natural bass.
A small amp and speaker has a limit as to the bass it can generate.
Any comments regarding this are welcome, as I am still learning a lot about amps and mods, and only know the basics, but enough to cause trouble for myself it appears !
Well I think I caught myself "Over doing" it once again, this time it has to do with adding a huge Cathode Bypass cap to the power tubes in a push pull 6V6 amp setup (amp has a single 12" Jensen speaker).
I learned that you can get away with a huge caps on single preamp tubes (as in 470uf 50v) to reduce hum, by creating a kind of short to dump the heater noise to ground. I figured a large cap might be good for the push pull power section as well, to get that last bit of low end... But it seems I caused an obnoxious swirly noise on the decay of low, and very high gain power chords. I just noticed this effect tonight, and it was driving me nuts as to why that was happening, as all seemed well with the amp for the last month or so, playing at lower gain settings.
The clue came when I backed off the bass settings severely using a stomp box EQ, and the nasty sound lessened quite a bit, so on a hunch I removed the huge cathode bypass cap I had added from the power tubes all together, and that seems to have fixed it, the nasty sound is gone !
So I am going to give myself the same advice I routinely give others, don't try to achieve unnatural levels of bass from your smallish amp. If you need a "Bigger" sound with more bass, hook up your amp to a bigger multi speaker cabinet, with perhaps bigger speakers with more natural bass.
A small amp and speaker has a limit as to the bass it can generate.
Any comments regarding this are welcome, as I am still learning a lot about amps and mods, and only know the basics, but enough to cause trouble for myself it appears !
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