A while ago a customer brought in a butchered b/f Bassman head and said could I strip out all the nonsense in there and build a Vibroking preamp, no vib or reverb, to replace one of the channels? So I did and it sounded wonderful, and raised a few questions I haven't since been able to answer.
I just thoughtlessly cloned this unusual circuit (with the minor filtering tweaks from the file on Ampage somewhere, as I had put these in a VK before and liked them). I included the first stage cap-coupled cathode follower despite the fact that that stage kind of looks to my non-designer's eye like it's mainly there to decouple the reverb... yet it's a bit complex for that function...??
For the other channel he said could I put in the standard b/f preamp. I did that too, and it sounded fine, but the VK channel was sweeter, crisper, rather more gainy, nicer breakup - superior all round we thought, I thought it sounded a bit like there was an EF86 in there.
I've been wondering about that first stage ever since, specifically whether it contributed to the lovely sweet gainy touch-sensitive nature of that VK preamp. No voltage gain but quite a bit of current gain, yes?
The schem's a bit confusing at first as V1a looks like it's stage 1, but of course it only drives the reverb. Minus reverb and vib here's how I think the structure goes, correct me if I'm wrong, do:
input coupled with a cap to
Stage 1 V2a - cathode follower
effects loop
Stage 2 v4a
some RC filtering a bit unusual to guitar amps
volume control
Stage 3 V4b
tone stack
PI
What would you expect Stage 1 to contribute to this preamp?
I just thoughtlessly cloned this unusual circuit (with the minor filtering tweaks from the file on Ampage somewhere, as I had put these in a VK before and liked them). I included the first stage cap-coupled cathode follower despite the fact that that stage kind of looks to my non-designer's eye like it's mainly there to decouple the reverb... yet it's a bit complex for that function...??
For the other channel he said could I put in the standard b/f preamp. I did that too, and it sounded fine, but the VK channel was sweeter, crisper, rather more gainy, nicer breakup - superior all round we thought, I thought it sounded a bit like there was an EF86 in there.
I've been wondering about that first stage ever since, specifically whether it contributed to the lovely sweet gainy touch-sensitive nature of that VK preamp. No voltage gain but quite a bit of current gain, yes?
The schem's a bit confusing at first as V1a looks like it's stage 1, but of course it only drives the reverb. Minus reverb and vib here's how I think the structure goes, correct me if I'm wrong, do:
input coupled with a cap to
Stage 1 V2a - cathode follower
effects loop
Stage 2 v4a
some RC filtering a bit unusual to guitar amps
volume control
Stage 3 V4b
tone stack
PI
What would you expect Stage 1 to contribute to this preamp?
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