maxfac wrote:Hi Colossal
Thanks for your efforts to help me with this. I've put the 250kA Masters in this afternoon and it's made such a positive difference I'll try adding the other 220k resistors when I can figure out where to put them.
That's great to hear that reducing the master helped. Apart from the volume drop, can you say that the tone is where you want it? You might not need to go any further if you feel the ugly distortion is dealt with for the conditions where you intend to play the amp.
The amp has less volume though, it was very loud before, quite a bit louder at the same settings than the Marshall Class 5 and Laney Lionheart 5 watt I've pitted it against. FWIW I'm using it with a homemade 1 x12 open back cab loaded with a early 70's Celestion G12 20 watt speaker.
I expect there would be some volume loss, but hopefully with it, the ugly distortion products from pushing the tube to hard. You might consider offsetting the volume loss with a more efficient speaker. I have a single EV 12ML Classic (8R) in a wide body, rear ported cab, and honestly, and I'm very sad to say this, it just blows my closed back 2x12 with some Greenback reissues. I love that cab and speakers and have always been a bit of a Celestion man but for the music I am playing, the EV has incredible, tight low end, is ighly articulate without excessive detail and it is loud. It is louder and more full sounding than the pair of 12" 25W Celestions. So this might be something to consider in shaping your tone. I have no doubt that these SE amps do sound great, we've heard that with Honeydip's and Mat's amps. It doesn't hurt that they are great players as well!
The cathode bias resistor is 330 ohms which to be honest I've always thought was a lot higher than most were using, but I've done the maths several times and it always comes out at around 11 watts disappattion. I've tried using readings at various VVR settings and it always comes out about the same. I'll send you my readings if you'd like to check them, maths was never my strong point!!
The cathode resistor is high, but your plate voltages are much higher than the other guys who are running their amps more center biased at low voltages. I haven't done the math, but your value sounds right. My 4xEL84 metal amp is cathode biased and I am sure my voltages are right where yours are. Crushing sounding amp. That is the amp I'm running the grid leaks at 160k wide open and it sounds really good. It just kills paired with that EV.
I've only used a 5k OT, the amp is a recycled Blackheart BH5, maybe I'm getting some high frequency artefacts from the OT it is quite small.
I'll amend my schematic to reflect the changes I've made and repost so you can see what I've done, always better to learn from someone else mistakes before you go and make your own !!!
I really appreciate you trying these changes and reporting back as it will certainly help others including me who might build one (or two!). In my opinion, I would say you could do very well to upgrade that OT if you like the amp enough to keep. Those generic OTs sound weak with anemic low end and fatiguing highs. The transformers are the foundation of the amp's tone no matter how small.
I will do a load line for your conditions and for an EL84 amp running 250V at 5k and repost. I am hoping to get to it today but may have to push it till next weekend as I will traveling this week. I've very interested to see how your future mods go.
Also, I noticed you did one of 10thTX's mods lowering OD2 cathode bypass cap to 1uF. I think that is a very good idea. It will really help tighten up the low end instead of pushing mush in to the power amp. I have a four gain stage amp that has 0.68uF straight across three of the four cathodes in the preamp and there is definitely a subsonic harmonic being generated that is absolutely huge. The amp's low end is super punchy and sounds like a bass module for a home theater. Really quite surprising. So it does not take large amounts of bypass capacitance to make a very fat sounding (high gain) amp.
Cheers (and thanks again for your input) Andy
Thank you for posting your results!