I had a BF Fender build I converted to have a post-phase inverter master ("Lar-Mar" type that replaces the power tube grid leak resistors). I observed that at lower settings (allowing the PI to distort first) there was static-like "undertone" that would appear at the attack of the fade away. It was only really noticeable at high treble settings and bright switch on, but very annoying and unmusical. It sounded kind of similar a cap discharging, but under the tone and would stop before the note fully decayed.
I thought maybe it was a bad tube or connection, but everything checked out. I then thought maybe a parasitic oscillation, but scope traces were totally clean at all frequencies and amp settings...
I don't know why I even thought of it, but I tried a larger PI input coupling cap, and the noise vanished. It was originally .001uf, but when changed to .1uF the noise was gone. I made sure the .001uF wasn't faulty and was able to repeat the results with different caps.
Why would a larger PI input cap resolve ugly distortion at the onset of clipping? The only thing I can think of is that is somehow improved the PI balance or something to do with there being less NFB with the PPIMV turned down...
I thought maybe it was a bad tube or connection, but everything checked out. I then thought maybe a parasitic oscillation, but scope traces were totally clean at all frequencies and amp settings...
I don't know why I even thought of it, but I tried a larger PI input coupling cap, and the noise vanished. It was originally .001uf, but when changed to .1uF the noise was gone. I made sure the .001uF wasn't faulty and was able to repeat the results with different caps.
Why would a larger PI input cap resolve ugly distortion at the onset of clipping? The only thing I can think of is that is somehow improved the PI balance or something to do with there being less NFB with the PPIMV turned down...
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