Hi all,
Firstly I'm not sure that this is the best part of the Forum to post this, so feel free to move it if required.
Now a few years ago I built a home-brew tube combo amp including tube driven and recovered spring reverb. During the design and breadboarding phase the reverb tank sat well away from the chassis, and all worked perfectly. But when I eventually put the chassis and the tank into the cabinet, I had issues with EMF noise pickup in the reverb tank "output" transducer.
I started a thread here, and got excellent advice thanks! Ended up putting a steel cover on the PT, and a steel plate covering the open side of the tank. These measures reduced the noise to an acceptable level, not perfect, but acceptable.
I have just put another build together, different circuit, different cabinet dimensions, same problem! If I remove the reverb tank from the cab and move it away from the PT, the noise disappears. There is no orientation of the tank within the cab that reduces the noise to acceptable levels.
I know that I can reduce the noise with shielding like I did last time. I even tested mu metal around the tank and it was quite effective also (not my mu metal, I'd have to spend the $ to get some!)
But looking closely at the tank transducers, got me wondering if they could be converted to a hum cancelling set-up, using 2 coils per transducer, reverse connected, and mounted on opposite magnetic polarity parts of the laminations. I know it works for guitar pickups, so could it work for these transducers?
Has this been done previously?
Is it possible?
Is it safe?
Any information on previous trials of this idea, or details on the workings of the transducers would be greatly appreciated.
Firstly I'm not sure that this is the best part of the Forum to post this, so feel free to move it if required.
Now a few years ago I built a home-brew tube combo amp including tube driven and recovered spring reverb. During the design and breadboarding phase the reverb tank sat well away from the chassis, and all worked perfectly. But when I eventually put the chassis and the tank into the cabinet, I had issues with EMF noise pickup in the reverb tank "output" transducer.
I started a thread here, and got excellent advice thanks! Ended up putting a steel cover on the PT, and a steel plate covering the open side of the tank. These measures reduced the noise to an acceptable level, not perfect, but acceptable.
I have just put another build together, different circuit, different cabinet dimensions, same problem! If I remove the reverb tank from the cab and move it away from the PT, the noise disappears. There is no orientation of the tank within the cab that reduces the noise to acceptable levels.
I know that I can reduce the noise with shielding like I did last time. I even tested mu metal around the tank and it was quite effective also (not my mu metal, I'd have to spend the $ to get some!)
But looking closely at the tank transducers, got me wondering if they could be converted to a hum cancelling set-up, using 2 coils per transducer, reverse connected, and mounted on opposite magnetic polarity parts of the laminations. I know it works for guitar pickups, so could it work for these transducers?
Has this been done previously?
Is it possible?
Is it safe?
Any information on previous trials of this idea, or details on the workings of the transducers would be greatly appreciated.
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