Princeton Reverb Help
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- Paul-in-KC
- Posts: 197
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- Location: Kansas City (metro area)
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Okay - here are the voltages:
Mains = 124 VAC
Recto pins 4&6 = 337 VAC; pin 8 = +412 VDC
V5 & V6 pins 3 = +407 VDC; pins 4 = +395 VDC
V4a [here's the weird stuff] pin 1 something around +260 VDC, BUT with
some AC around 80 V ???; pin3 some AC around 0.6 / 0.7;
V4b pin 6 = +194 VDC; pin 8 = +59 VDC
V1a pin 1 = +155 VDC; pin 3 = +1.4 VDC
V1b pin 6 = +159 VDC; pin 8 = +1.4 VDC
Any thoughts about where the AC is coming from???
Mains = 124 VAC
Recto pins 4&6 = 337 VAC; pin 8 = +412 VDC
V5 & V6 pins 3 = +407 VDC; pins 4 = +395 VDC
V4a [here's the weird stuff] pin 1 something around +260 VDC, BUT with
some AC around 80 V ???; pin3 some AC around 0.6 / 0.7;
V4b pin 6 = +194 VDC; pin 8 = +59 VDC
V1a pin 1 = +155 VDC; pin 3 = +1.4 VDC
V1b pin 6 = +159 VDC; pin 8 = +1.4 VDC
Any thoughts about where the AC is coming from???
- martin manning
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Re: Princeton Reverb Help
You might have some ultrasonic oscillation going on there.
-
Stevem
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Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Martin may be on to something, take your volt meter and set it for ac volts and hook it up across the amps speaker output, then plug a guitar in and turn down it volume control, then crank everything on the amp wide open, if you than read 1.5 vac or more the amp is oscilating !
When I die, I want to go like my Grandfather did, peacefully in his sleep.
Not screaming like the passengers in his car!
Cutting out a man's tongue does not mean he’s a liar, but it does show that you fear the truth he might speak about you!
Not screaming like the passengers in his car!
Cutting out a man's tongue does not mean he’s a liar, but it does show that you fear the truth he might speak about you!
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Yes it could be a parasitic; here's where the VTVM and O'scope comes in handy. The O'scope would really help looking for them in the ultrasonic range.martin manning wrote:You might have some ultrasonic oscillation going on there.
TM
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
What you are seeing is quite normal. V4a is the tremolo oscillator. There will be a healthy low freq. AC sine wave on the plate if the oscillator is enabled. My Fluke 87V is capable of measuring AC voltage and frequency of that trem signal. Probably a lot of other DMMs can also.V4a [here's the weird stuff] pin 1 something around +260 VDC, BUT with some AC around 80 V ???; pin3 some AC around 0.6 / 0.7;
... Any thoughts about where the AC is coming from???
If you disable the trem with a footswitch or by shorting the trem footswitch jack to ground, that 80VAC should go away.
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Excellent point hidden in plain sight, that is the ultimate oscillator and would explain that condition at V4 if it ceases when grounded out.sluckey wrote:What you are seeing is quite normal. V4a is the tremolo oscillator. There will be a healthy low freq. AC sine wave on the plate if the oscillator is enabled. My Fluke 87V is capable of measuring AC voltage and frequency of that trem signal. Probably a lot of other DMMs can also.V4a [here's the weird stuff] pin 1 something around +260 VDC, BUT with some AC around 80 V ???; pin3 some AC around 0.6 / 0.7;
... Any thoughts about where the AC is coming from???
If you disable the trem with a footswitch or by shorting the trem footswitch jack to ground, that 80VAC should go away.
I still think from what the OP described orginally, the amp is relatively normal. The PR is not a Vibrolux or Deluxe Reverb.
TM
- Paul-in-KC
- Posts: 197
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- Location: Kansas City (metro area)
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Ah - I was wondering if it (the AC) might be related to the tremolo/vibrato.
I'll check it out after I get home.
Thanks very much to all that take the time to post. It is much appreciated.
I'll report on what I see (and hear) after "turning off" the vibrato.
-Paul
I'll check it out after I get home.
Thanks very much to all that take the time to post. It is much appreciated.
I'll report on what I see (and hear) after "turning off" the vibrato.
-Paul
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
I agree.I still think from what the OP described orginally, the amp is relatively normal. The PR is not a Vibrolux or Deluxe Reverb.
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Good point. Paul, do you have a sine wave generator? You could put this to rest if you measure the clean output wattage. I get about 11 watts clean out of my PR build with 366v on plates, and 14 watts clean from my simplified blackface build with 336 on the plates of 6V6 pair.
I build and repair tube amps. http://amps.monkeymatic.com
- Milkmansound
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Re: Princeton Reverb Help
sometimes its something simple - like the output jack is still nearly shorted when the cable is plugged in.
Pretty sure Mojo kits ship with Chinese input and output jacks - I would visually inspect the shorting output jack
a Princeton has a cathodyne PI so you can't screw up the 470ohm resistor like you can on a long tail PI. (anyone who says they have never made that mistake is probably lying)
Pretty sure Mojo kits ship with Chinese input and output jacks - I would visually inspect the shorting output jack
a Princeton has a cathodyne PI so you can't screw up the 470ohm resistor like you can on a long tail PI. (anyone who says they have never made that mistake is probably lying)
- Paul-in-KC
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Re: Princeton Reverb Help
xtian, I do have a sine wave generator (because I figured I'd need one sooner or later). It's an old tube model, but it works. I have generated a signal and looked at it on my oscilloscope.xtian wrote:Good point. Paul, do you have a sine wave generator? You could put this to rest if you measure the clean output wattage. I get about 11 watts clean out of my PR build with 366v on plates, and 14 watts clean from my simplified blackface build with 336 on the plates of 6V6 pair.
Please hold the laughter, but - how would I measure the clean output wattage using an sine wave generator?
-Paul
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
Put 1kHz, 1v p-p (peak-to-peak) at the input (this part is not critical, as long as you're not driving V1 into distortion)Paul-in-KC wrote:How would I measure the clean output wattage using an sine wave generator?
Forgot to mention dummy load! You will not want to listen to the sine wave at full volume!
Connect o-scope to speaker output/dummy load. You should see your 1kHz sine on the scope.
Slowly turn up the volume on the amp until your sine wave starts to squish/flatten/distort/square off. Make a note of the voltage of the sine wave. In my Princeton, it was about 27v p-p.
To find RMS voltage, multiply p-p voltage by 0.3535.
To find wattage, square the RMS, and divide by the load.
So in my case, it was (27 x 0.3535)^2 / 8 = 11.4 watts.
I build and repair tube amps. http://amps.monkeymatic.com
- Paul-in-KC
- Posts: 197
- Joined: Tue Jan 24, 2012 8:57 pm
- Location: Kansas City (metro area)
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
xtian wrote:Put 1kHz, 1v p-p (peak-to-peak) at the input (this part is not critical, as long as you're not driving V1 into distortion)Paul-in-KC wrote:How would I measure the clean output wattage using an sine wave generator?
Forgot to mention dummy load! You will not want to listen to the sine wave at full volume!
Connect o-scope to speaker output/dummy load. You should see your 1kHz sine on the scope.
Slowly turn up the volume on the amp until your sine wave starts to squish/flatten/distort/square off. Make a note of the voltage of the sine wave. In my Princeton, it was about 27v p-p.
To find RMS voltage, multiply p-p voltage by 0.3535.
To find wattage, square the RMS, and divide by the load.
So in my case, it was (27 x 0.3535)^2 / 8 = 11.4 watts.
Okay - can do. I also have a dummy-load box.
Thanks so much for all of the tutoring.
- Paul-in-KC
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- Joined: Tue Jan 24, 2012 8:57 pm
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Mystery solved...
All,
Well - indeed the AC on V4 was from the vibrato.
I haven't measured the clean output yet, but did also (partially) find my lack of volume.
While testing input jack #2 (which I hadn't previously), I found the "expected" volume/output.
So, something in jack #1 is either dumping signal to ground, or has some resistance. I need to investigate that more closely to see exactly what's going on.
Other than that, I'm pretty sure this is a normal healthy PR AA1164.
Thank you fellas for your input and advice.
xtian - I'll post the numbers I get for "clean" power out after I measure.
Well - indeed the AC on V4 was from the vibrato.
I haven't measured the clean output yet, but did also (partially) find my lack of volume.
While testing input jack #2 (which I hadn't previously), I found the "expected" volume/output.
So, something in jack #1 is either dumping signal to ground, or has some resistance. I need to investigate that more closely to see exactly what's going on.
Other than that, I'm pretty sure this is a normal healthy PR AA1164.
Thank you fellas for your input and advice.
xtian - I'll post the numbers I get for "clean" power out after I measure.
Re: Princeton Reverb Help
The #1 jack (has the 1MΩ resistor) is considerably louder than the #2 jack by design.So, something in jack #1 is either dumping signal to ground, or has some resistance. I need to investigate that more closely to see exactly what's going on.