Geez... how many time has this one been debated...
Anyway, I have a specific question: I've been studying the Fender 6G16 Vibroverb layout, which doesn't give the details of the wiring of the filter caps under the doghouse. I *think* that only the first filter ground (two 16 uF's in parallel) is run over to the PT area and soldered to the chassis, while all of the other caps (the ones from the nodes labeled B, C, and D on the B+) have their grounds tied together on the filter board and then that junction is taken inside and soldered to the chassis near the input stages.
Is this right? There are few pictures available with the cap cover off. If so, would it not be better to take the ground of the second filter (B node, immediately after the choke on the B+, which is feeding the screens) along with the first filter over to the PT?
Do other (later) Fenders with the grounds taken inside the chassis have the same arrangement in this regard? (I know that the earlier amps, like the 5F6-A had all the filters grounded to the doghouse itself)
MPM
Anyway, I have a specific question: I've been studying the Fender 6G16 Vibroverb layout, which doesn't give the details of the wiring of the filter caps under the doghouse. I *think* that only the first filter ground (two 16 uF's in parallel) is run over to the PT area and soldered to the chassis, while all of the other caps (the ones from the nodes labeled B, C, and D on the B+) have their grounds tied together on the filter board and then that junction is taken inside and soldered to the chassis near the input stages.
Is this right? There are few pictures available with the cap cover off. If so, would it not be better to take the ground of the second filter (B node, immediately after the choke on the B+, which is feeding the screens) along with the first filter over to the PT?
Do other (later) Fenders with the grounds taken inside the chassis have the same arrangement in this regard? (I know that the earlier amps, like the 5F6-A had all the filters grounded to the doghouse itself)
MPM
Comment