PI trimmer and tube mismatch
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- FUCHSAUDIO
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Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
You should see AC on the plate, and you should be able to measure from plate to ground. You should also be able to measure plate to plate AC as well. 
I used a dual AC Voltmeter (Leader) and with output of amp at 1 volt, I then measured approx 750 MV at the plates of the driver. Since I could look at both halves, I adjusted the trimmer until they were equal. They should measure '0' when at equal but opposite phase.
			
			
									
									I used a dual AC Voltmeter (Leader) and with output of amp at 1 volt, I then measured approx 750 MV at the plates of the driver. Since I could look at both halves, I adjusted the trimmer until they were equal. They should measure '0' when at equal but opposite phase.
Proud holder of US Patent # 7336165.
						Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
Hi ,which model? Leader LMV 181A o other?
			
			
									
									
						Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
Man, I chased my tail for a half hour on this one. I could measure the AC signal as dead steady through V1 and (when engaged), and then things would get sloppy some time after that; the signal would waver at a low frequency, almost like a beat. I was sure something must be oscillating, so I started chopsticking.FUCHSAUDIO wrote:You should see AC on the plate, and you should be able to measure from plate to ground. You should also be able to measure plate to plate AC as well.
I used a dual AC Voltmeter (Leader) and with output of amp at 1 volt, I then measured approx 750 MV at the plates of the driver. Since I could look at both halves, I adjusted the trimmer until they were equal. They should measure '0' when at equal but opposite phase.
Then it dawned on me that I still had the effects loop engaged. With effects on. Yup, a delay/reverb on a steady signal will do some odd things, I guess.
Okay, so I ended up being able to measure a steady AC signal per Andy's and Tony's description, but only after putting a 20k pot in was I able to find the matched spot on several tubes, including one that is supposedly balanced. So I need to measure the relative total resistance and match the resistors better to get to where I can use a 5-10k pot. 86k and 100k isn't cutting it.
But anyway, using this method, the DC voltage is close to about 2VDC difference when matched, and the amp sounds really good. I haven't tried the middle position Tele feedback, but my HB guitar already sounds like it's trying to feedback more. Thanks again for all the patience! From what I can tell, this method (without effects loop) works well to get you in the ballpark.
-g
						Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
g-Glad you got it figured out..FWIW The AC balance you did will get you close however since output transformers are never perfectly balanced continue to sweep around the sweet spot see if it makes a difference..Try it with the Tele test if you feel like it..Keep us posted..
Good luck
Tony
			
			
									
									Good luck
Tony
" The psychics on my bench is the same as Dumble'"
						- glasman
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Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
A few additional comments on adjusting the PI trimmers.
Starting
1. Normally I find that 10K is about the best split between the two PI plate resistors. I like 110K/120K or 91K/100K depending on the PI style.
2. 5K or 10K trimmer. The sweet spots are very narrow in my testing over the years.
Always inject the single directly to the PI input. Anywhere prior to this point will introduce too much distortion and make the adjustment almost impossible.
Methods I have used.
Scope and Generator. Requires dual trace scope and low distortion signal generator.
1. Inject a 1Khz single directly to the input to the PI.
2. Measure Plate 1 on Channel 1 and Plate 2 on Channel.
3. Set the scope up to sum the two channels.
4. Adjust trimmer for minimum signal deflection. On either side, the signal will amplitude will increase.
Note : it will never be a straight line, but you can get very close.
This approach is similar to Andy's AC voltmeter metod.
My preferred method
Requires a spectrum analyzer.
1. Inject a 100hz single directly to the input to the PI. I use a 1v p/p signal.
2. Place the spectrum analyzer input to the speaker output. I normally grab the speaker side of the PA feedback resistor.
3. Set the analyzer up to show the frequency spectrum and measure the signal amplitude at 200hz (second harmonic).
4. Adjust the trimmer to the minimum amplitude at 200hz (second harmonic). You should be able to sweep on either side of this point and the 200hz harmonic should increase. In a skyliner style PI you should be able to achieve a level difference of at least -70db and about -55dB for a Marshall style PI.
All of the above require a properly size dummy load.
Gary
I have one to adjust later today, I will upload some pictures.
			
			
									
									Starting
1. Normally I find that 10K is about the best split between the two PI plate resistors. I like 110K/120K or 91K/100K depending on the PI style.
2. 5K or 10K trimmer. The sweet spots are very narrow in my testing over the years.
Always inject the single directly to the PI input. Anywhere prior to this point will introduce too much distortion and make the adjustment almost impossible.
Methods I have used.
Scope and Generator. Requires dual trace scope and low distortion signal generator.
1. Inject a 1Khz single directly to the input to the PI.
2. Measure Plate 1 on Channel 1 and Plate 2 on Channel.
3. Set the scope up to sum the two channels.
4. Adjust trimmer for minimum signal deflection. On either side, the signal will amplitude will increase.
Note : it will never be a straight line, but you can get very close.
This approach is similar to Andy's AC voltmeter metod.
My preferred method
Requires a spectrum analyzer.
1. Inject a 100hz single directly to the input to the PI. I use a 1v p/p signal.
2. Place the spectrum analyzer input to the speaker output. I normally grab the speaker side of the PA feedback resistor.
3. Set the analyzer up to show the frequency spectrum and measure the signal amplitude at 200hz (second harmonic).
4. Adjust the trimmer to the minimum amplitude at 200hz (second harmonic). You should be able to sweep on either side of this point and the 200hz harmonic should increase. In a skyliner style PI you should be able to achieve a level difference of at least -70db and about -55dB for a Marshall style PI.
All of the above require a properly size dummy load.
Gary
I have one to adjust later today, I will upload some pictures.
  Located in the St Croix River Valley- Afton, MN
About 5 miles south of I-94
aka K0GWA, K0 Glas Werks Amplification
www.glaswerks.com
						About 5 miles south of I-94
aka K0GWA, K0 Glas Werks Amplification
www.glaswerks.com
- glasman
- Posts: 1446
- Joined: Wed Jan 19, 2005 10:37 pm
- Location: Afton, MN (St Croix River Valley)
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Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
Forgot to mention,  I select tubes that have a matched transconductance (the only thing I can measure on my old Hickok). between the halves.  Ideal case is matched transconductance and matched gain.
Someday when I am rich and famous I will own an amplitrex.
			
			
									
									Someday when I am rich and famous I will own an amplitrex.
  Located in the St Croix River Valley- Afton, MN
About 5 miles south of I-94
aka K0GWA, K0 Glas Werks Amplification
www.glaswerks.com
						About 5 miles south of I-94
aka K0GWA, K0 Glas Werks Amplification
www.glaswerks.com
Re: ears
Well, it sounds better than it did, but I have to say I have no confidence in my ability to adjust the 20k pot in small enough increments. Measuring from the wiper to the far tail of each resistor, Gary is right on the money: AC balance on mine is with a 10k difference. At the time I got the carbon film resistors I'm using, the closest values were 100k and 86k. So I need to get my hands on a 90k-ish resistor and put a smaller pot in so I have higher resolution on the adjustment.angelodp wrote:Now how does it jive to your ears. Now that you have that spot, if you tweak by ear do you get back to that spot.
Thanks again for the patience, guys. This method exposed something that hadn't been discussed before: that adjusting by ear, which is probably GREAT, won't work at all if your sweet spot is outside the adjustment range. So having an objective way to find out whether you're close is extremely helpful.
-g
						Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
Interesting topic! 
In what way do you guys take the presence circuit in consideration?
The way you set the presence control has effect or is it negligible?
			
			
									
									
						In what way do you guys take the presence circuit in consideration?
The way you set the presence control has effect or is it negligible?
- glasman
- Posts: 1446
- Joined: Wed Jan 19, 2005 10:37 pm
- Location: Afton, MN (St Croix River Valley)
- Contact:
Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
I always make sure that the presence control is set to minimum. But that is me....erwin_ve wrote:Interesting topic!
In what way do you guys take the presence circuit in consideration?
The way you set the presence control has effect or is it negligible?
  Located in the St Croix River Valley- Afton, MN
About 5 miles south of I-94
aka K0GWA, K0 Glas Werks Amplification
www.glaswerks.com
						About 5 miles south of I-94
aka K0GWA, K0 Glas Werks Amplification
www.glaswerks.com
Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
Ange,
I'm not sure how critical it is to inject it into the PI itself. I simply made sure I was on the clean channel, and that the signal itself wasn't so high that it was driving V1 into distortion.
Hopefully Gary will tell us if it's really critical to put the signal directly into the PI.
			
			
									
									I'm not sure how critical it is to inject it into the PI itself. I simply made sure I was on the clean channel, and that the signal itself wasn't so high that it was driving V1 into distortion.
Hopefully Gary will tell us if it's really critical to put the signal directly into the PI.
-g
						- FUCHSAUDIO
- Posts: 1256
- Joined: Fri Apr 08, 2005 2:48 pm
- Location: New Jersey (you got a problem with that ?)
- Contact:
Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
I use my loop return input, and it seems to work fine. Using the input preamp potentially adds distortion or overload, or frequency changes that might affect the measurement.
			
			
									
									Proud holder of US Patent # 7336165.
						Re: PI trimmer and tube mismatch
Inject it right into the return jack on the loop... Andy beat me to it..
Tony
			
			
									
									Tony
" The psychics on my bench is the same as Dumble'"
						



