I'm finishing up a reproduction of the Farfisa F/AR spring reverb unit, and I wanted to think through the chassis/signal grounding.
As you probably know if you're reading, you can get Accutronics reverb units with one jack grounded or both Input/Output jacks isolated from the chassis. Typically, one jack is grounded to the spring tank's chassis, but I'm wondering if this is the best way to do it or just the most convenient.
In my case, the spring tank will be completely enclosed inside a steel chassis, so I could either isolate the tank from the main single-point chassis ground and ground it via the coax from the output coil, or I could isolate the output coil and ground the tank's chassis to the main chassis.
Is one approach inherently better in terms of keeping noise to a minimum?
David
As you probably know if you're reading, you can get Accutronics reverb units with one jack grounded or both Input/Output jacks isolated from the chassis. Typically, one jack is grounded to the spring tank's chassis, but I'm wondering if this is the best way to do it or just the most convenient.
In my case, the spring tank will be completely enclosed inside a steel chassis, so I could either isolate the tank from the main single-point chassis ground and ground it via the coax from the output coil, or I could isolate the output coil and ground the tank's chassis to the main chassis.
Is one approach inherently better in terms of keeping noise to a minimum?
David
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