OK...this driving me NUTZ,
I'll attach the schemo for your reference.
Initially, this amp had a blown EL34. Replaced the pair. This amp only has a tube balance pot that takes the place of the cathode resistors w/fixed negative bias to the grids. Idle wattage was extremely high so paralleled the neg bias series resistor to achieve idle wattage that was within acceptable range.
Main cap-cans in preamp & main amp all not leaking & functioning.
I only replaced 2 1uf bypass caps in the preamp section and one1uf on cath of V6.
At this point I really hadn't turned the channel volumes down all the way so unfortunately, I cannot say whether or not it was this way before I worked on it. Also it is new to the customer but he doesn't recall if he ever turned the volumes down all the way. Once I did that I realized that there as a fair amount of signal bleed-thru on both channels with volumes all that way down.
The signal goes from V1a p7 thru the volume pot and tone stack to V1b p5 grid. Grounding out the signal at the volume pot has no effect on the bleed-thru signal.
After a bunch of signal tracing & disconnecting this and that and filter cap jumping (to be certain signal not a decoupling issue), I finally just disconnected the V1b grid p5 and even that did not change the bleed-thru!
The only thing that cancels the bleed-thru is grounding that grid. BTW, I have removed all the tubes except V-1 and V-6.
It seems that the signal is either bleeding thru internally in the tube itself (I have xnged the tube) or the socket is somehow weirdly conductive but only between pins 5-V1B & p7-V1a the plate of the input amp section of the tube. P 6 is the plate of
I've even signal traced the grounds to see if somehow weirdly the signal is sneaking thru them....weird I know but a dying man grabs at straws .
I've added a shielded cable to V1b p5 just to eliminate the antenna effect while it's disconnected to be certain it's not picking up the amplified signal from V1a plate to no avail.
I tried to measure the actual tube socket to see if it's somehow become conductive...not.
I've thoroughly cleaned the tube socket, too.
Much of this seems very implausible as channel 2 suffers from the exact same malady.
Any ideas...Thanx, glen
I'll attach the schemo for your reference.
Initially, this amp had a blown EL34. Replaced the pair. This amp only has a tube balance pot that takes the place of the cathode resistors w/fixed negative bias to the grids. Idle wattage was extremely high so paralleled the neg bias series resistor to achieve idle wattage that was within acceptable range.
Main cap-cans in preamp & main amp all not leaking & functioning.
I only replaced 2 1uf bypass caps in the preamp section and one1uf on cath of V6.
At this point I really hadn't turned the channel volumes down all the way so unfortunately, I cannot say whether or not it was this way before I worked on it. Also it is new to the customer but he doesn't recall if he ever turned the volumes down all the way. Once I did that I realized that there as a fair amount of signal bleed-thru on both channels with volumes all that way down.
The signal goes from V1a p7 thru the volume pot and tone stack to V1b p5 grid. Grounding out the signal at the volume pot has no effect on the bleed-thru signal.
After a bunch of signal tracing & disconnecting this and that and filter cap jumping (to be certain signal not a decoupling issue), I finally just disconnected the V1b grid p5 and even that did not change the bleed-thru!
The only thing that cancels the bleed-thru is grounding that grid. BTW, I have removed all the tubes except V-1 and V-6.
It seems that the signal is either bleeding thru internally in the tube itself (I have xnged the tube) or the socket is somehow weirdly conductive but only between pins 5-V1B & p7-V1a the plate of the input amp section of the tube. P 6 is the plate of
I've even signal traced the grounds to see if somehow weirdly the signal is sneaking thru them....weird I know but a dying man grabs at straws .
I've added a shielded cable to V1b p5 just to eliminate the antenna effect while it's disconnected to be certain it's not picking up the amplified signal from V1a plate to no avail.
I tried to measure the actual tube socket to see if it's somehow become conductive...not.
I've thoroughly cleaned the tube socket, too.
Much of this seems very implausible as channel 2 suffers from the exact same malady.
Any ideas...Thanx, glen
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