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Problems with extra gain stage in 2203

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  • Problems with extra gain stage in 2203

    I've added an extra gain stage into the front end of a 2203 and it sounded great until I switched in the Mercury Magnetics OT, now it just oscillates wildly.

    I realise this is a lead dress issue since the amp plays fine with the extra gain stage bypassed.

    any thoughts on why the OT swap made a stable amp unstable?

    also, any thoughts/tips on getting this extra stage working again without oscillation? - I'm already using shielded wire on all the signal runs and 120pF caps across all the plate resistors.
    HTH - Heavier Than Hell

  • #2
    You probably need to reverse the secondaries on the OT. If the OT is installed with the secondaries switched, your negative feedback becomes positive and the amp oscillates like crazy.

    That's my guess on your issue.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Jag View Post
      You probably need to reverse the secondaries on the OT. If the OT is installed with the secondaries switched, your negative feedback becomes positive and the amp oscillates like crazy.

      That's my guess on your issue.
      thanks for the suggestion, but I tried that and it's not the problem.
      HTH - Heavier Than Hell

      Comment


      • #4
        Try these:
        1. Ensure your lead dress is clean.
        2. Check for a microphonic tube.
        3. Look for bad solder joints.
        4. Try a bigger plate resistor bypass cap on one of the secondary gain stages.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by mytco View Post
          Try these:
          1. Ensure your lead dress is clean.
          2. Check for a microphonic tube.
          3. Look for bad solder joints.
          4. Try a bigger plate resistor bypass cap on one of the secondary gain stages.
          1. lead dress fine and I've used shielded wire too
          2. ECC83s are all fine
          3. I'll check the solder joints, but I'm not a beginner by any stretch AND the extra gain stage was functioning fine before the OT swap, so I doubt it's dry joints.
          4. would you have bigger bypass caps on gain stages down the line (the 2nd or third) rather than the very first gain stage?

          Lastly, thanks for the suggestions - all input welcome and appreciated.
          HTH - Heavier Than Hell

          Comment


          • #6
            I'd put my money on a bad solder joint. Just because somebody has a lot of experience doesn't mean you can't get a bad joint. What sometimes happens is that there's usually a little bit of surface oxidation on the wire strands, and what you wind up with is NOT a cold joint but rather an encapsulated joint for lack of a better way to put it. The solder just kinda lays on top of the wire and never actually bonds to it....and this makes it a real bitch to find when it happens because the joint LOOKS good.

            Carl

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by CarlZ View Post
              I'd put my money on a bad solder joint. Just because somebody has a lot of experience doesn't mean you can't get a bad joint. What sometimes happens is that there's usually a little bit of surface oxidation on the wire strands, and what you wind up with is NOT a cold joint but rather an encapsulated joint for lack of a better way to put it. The solder just kinda lays on top of the wire and never actually bonds to it....and this makes it a real bitch to find when it happens because the joint LOOKS good.

              Carl
              I'll go back and suck the solder out since theres only a handful of joints on the extra stage, but I'm really doubtful it's a bad joint. Why would the extra stage 'mod' work fine with one OT and then squeel with another?

              anyway, I'll get the iron heated up and see if I can get this sorted.
              HTH - Heavier Than Hell

              Comment


              • #8
                because the bad joint is probably on the transformer lead and not in the circuit wiring.

                Carl

                Comment


                • #9
                  are the leads coming out from the bottom (through the chassis) the right way (i.e. plate leads from hole near back, secondary leads from hole near front)? I recall reading something (perhaps on the Marshall site or maybe an amp review) that Marshall got it wrong on a few amps (HW series?) and had to correct it. My understanding is that since the plate leads radiate lots of powerful signal, this can cause instability from positive feedback (and maybe too much negative as well?).

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by CarlZ View Post
                    because the bad joint is probably on the transformer lead and not in the circuit wiring.

                    Carl
                    ahh, cheers Carl - I get you now. I've checked that over, but the amp works fine with the standard 2203 setup, so if it were a bad joint on the OT it would show up with or without the extra gain stage, right?

                    just to clarify, I'm only getting instability with the extra gain stage switched into circuit - the standard 2203 preamp is fine.
                    HTH - Heavier Than Hell

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by dai h. View Post
                      are the leads coming out from the bottom (through the chassis) the right way (i.e. plate leads from hole near back, secondary leads from hole near front)? I recall reading something (perhaps on the Marshall site or maybe an amp review) that Marshall got it wrong on a few amps (HW series?) and had to correct it. My understanding is that since the plate leads radiate lots of powerful signal, this can cause instability from positive feedback (and maybe too much negative as well?).
                      I've put the transformer in the same way as the stock one and also the same way as my '76 Superbass. That is, the primary side (plate leads) closest to the pots and the secondary side (speaker taps) closest to the output tubes.
                      HTH - Heavier Than Hell

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Have you thrown it on a scope? You may not hear anything in clean mode but with the hotter signal from the extra gain stage it may be making the problem pronounced enough to really get it going. You could easily have a small parasitic at a 100 kHz or so that's not enough to influence the clean channel but when switching over to high gain it's making the amp go nuts.

                        Carl

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by CarlZ View Post
                          Have you thrown it on a scope? You may not hear anything in clean mode but with the hotter signal from the extra gain stage it may be making the problem pronounced enough to really get it going. You could easily have a small parasitic at a 100 kHz or so that's not enough to influence the clean channel but when switching over to high gain it's making the amp go nuts.

                          Carl
                          unfortunately, all I have is a software scope which I've never got round to learning how to use.

                          the normal 2203 mode is quite dirty already since I've lowered to 10k on V1b to 2k7, so theres no real clean channel to speak of.

                          the extra stage is just blasting the front end with more gain really (much like an OD pedal, except achieved internally with a single ECC83 stage).

                          I should really buy a scope and a sig. gen. for stuff like this - would make things MUCH easier to track down.
                          HTH - Heavier Than Hell

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Sounds like just way too much gain at the front of the preamp sections to me.
                            I wouldn't be surprised to see there is an oscillation going too, and maybe the OT is ringing at some high frequency that now has much more gas behind it with the extra gain stage.

                            Just a passing thought:

                            Just for fun, try a high voltage capacitance like, .001uF to .0047uF with a 2w-5w 10K to 22K resistor in series with it... all that across the output tranny primary... lug 3 to lug 3 on the tube sockets. Hmmm... maybe lug 3 to ground on each side will be better.
                            If it works, the resistor will need to be a large one cause the amp can make a ton of power at the frequencies effecting and the cap will probably need to be at least 1000v... I'd use two 630v caps in series for a start... like, two .0022uF in series, two .00047uF, two .01uF caps... ETC., ... that will give you some hi-v protection.
                            120pF across the PI plate loads just might not be enough.
                            120pF across a 100K resistor has a -3dB point of around +13KHz... I bet the average guitar player can't even hear much of 15KHz anymore so your squeal is probably much much lower.
                            How about 360pF to 470pF across the plates but one at a time... that will limit the gain by a few dB starting from around 4500Hz (360pF) down to 3500Hz (470pF).
                            By comparison, the brown Deluxe uses a big 3000pF across it's 220K plate load resistor for a -3dB point of 2200Hz. And it sounds a little duller too.

                            Also, do you by chance find that the presence control changes the treble tone of the oscillations in anyway? That can be a sign of an ultrasonic oscillation.
                            Bruce

                            Mission Amps
                            Denver, CO. 80022
                            www.missionamps.com
                            303-955-2412

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I reckon it's a lead dress issue like Dai H. mentioned. The OT plate leads do indeed have a very high signal voltage on them, and it only takes a few picofarads of stray capacitance from them back to the early stages to make the whole mess oscillate.

                              Maybe you dressed the new plate leads just a little closer to your new gain stage than the old plate leads were. Try moving the plate leads as far from the preamp section as you can. Prod them around with a chopstick while the oscillation is happening, and see if it changes in volume or tone.

                              To make really sure, try putting some aluminium foil over the plate leads, grounded to the chassis, so the preamp can't "see" them at all. The coupling is capacitive, not inductive, so foil is all you need to stop it.

                              Maybe you dressed them the same, but the new O.T. has more leakage inductance, which blocks the high frequencies from the speaker and makes them hang around more on the primary side. Try Bruce's snubber network.

                              P.S. Also make sure your tube shields are on, especially on the tube for that extra stage you added. (While we're brainstorming, if you've just added one stage, what did you do with the other triode in the bottle?)
                              "Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"

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