There were a couple of reasons why I wanted to explore the problem of what MrD meant when he stamped the FX loop of his 124 chassis with '2.5 VOLTS RMS - .5M OHMS.' Martin's theory that 2.5Vrms represented both the limit of a clean, unclipped signal, and (inferring) a safe operating level for 9V effects, along with the expected load of effects at 500k is fairly compelling for me. A second reason, was to determine the maximum voltage in this part of the circuit because, having tried a passive prototype of a loop, I am unhappy with the results and I am now considering an active FX loop. However, in order to design the active circuit with a realistic input level, I needed to know the max voltages we are looking at in my design. I will come back to the passive prototype shortly, but first @sluckey I went back to the amp and ran the tests again using a 37mV input signal.
Once again, it was the clean channel only but following the Fender process, I turned the bass, mid and treble all the way up and set the probes to 10x with AC coupling. The 37mV sine is noisier than the 1V, and this gave me some erratic Vpp readings.
Here are the traces with the volume and master at full with a 37mV input:
For a 37.29mV(rms) input signal (blue trace), I measured 150mV(p-p). Using the formula I posted earlier, it should have been 105.47mVpp. However, I'm not going to let a few stray millivolts break up the band so reading the signal at the wiper on the master pot, I read 17.83Vrms and 52.16Vpp. The caulculated Vpp is much closer this time at 50.43V so Steve is right, it does clean up the maths. This, is pretty much the same result I got before with the Volume and Master at full with a 1V input signal (actually closer to 900mV) so at the top end of the dials for M and V, it doesn't result in any big changes but the maths, and the signal are cleaner... tighter.
I think this next trace shows how it cleans up the signal. This is with the volume at midnight and the master at 100%
What I am really interested in at the end of the day is the way the signal looks at something like a playing level. This is now with the V and M pots both turned up to about midnight - which since I'm using j-taper pots there, is more or less 30% of max.
The signal now looks quite symmetrical and clean and it shows something of the dynamic (touch sensitive) nature of these amps that when you don't drive the input, you can can get a very clean signal. You will notice it isn't exactly the inverse phase of the input signal; they aren't exactly 180° apart. If anyone could enlighten me what causes there may be for this slightly "out of phase" timing I would be grateful, and it might go some way towards improving or reducing some of the distortion that happens when the input level is much higher.
All in all though, an eye-opening experiment. A big thanks to sluckey (hope I got your name right) for keeping me sane