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It' s an LDR ( Light Dependent Resistor ), the little portion of the schematic you uploaded does not show its "surroundings", but usually, in guitar amps, LDRs can be found in the vibrato/tremolo section - the resistor on the right changes its value depending on the light intensity of the lamp on the left, ( the ellipse around the lamp and the resistor means they' re both contained in the same envelope ) so it's both called an opto-isolator ( because it isolates electrically one stage from another ) or an opto-coupler ( because it couples the two stages optically ). Visually it looks like a black bug with four legs, this is the reason why some amp techs call it "trem roach".
Hope this helps
Best regards
Bob
Well, you won't find one in every Fender amp; only models with tremolo have them. It's an opto-isolator, often called the "tremolo roach" because of it's resemblance to a small bug. It consists of a neon lamp and a photocell squished together inside a short length of heat-shrink tubing, with their leads sticking out the ends. The lamp is driven by the tremolo oscillator, and it's varying intensity of light causes a corresponding change in the resistance of the photocell, which acts as one leg of a voltage divider and thus varies the intensity of the audio signal.
-tb
"If you're the only person I irritate with my choice of words today I'll be surprised" Chuck H.
'just a minor footnote. These photocell/neon lamp assemblies are in all "Blackface" and later Fender models with [as Fender called it] Vibrato (even though technically, it's tremolo). On prior models, Fender used a "modulation" tube stage, without the photo/ neon "roach".
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