5e3 hum
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- Noval_novice
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- Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2010 11:22 pm
- Location: Tennessee
5e3 hum
I have an issue with a 5e3 kit build I've just completed. There is a tremendous amount of hum (and no guitar signal) when the bright channel volume is turned past 1 or 2. The normal channel works well and sounds good. I know the problem must be between the bright channel input jacks and the volume 1 pot. Anyone have suggestions as to the most likely culprit?
Thanks in advance!
Thanks in advance!
Re: 5e3 hum
Begin by swapping V1 for a known good tube, check the input jacks and wiring to V1, check wire routing.
A few suggestions:
http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/hum.htm
A few suggestions:
http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/hum.htm
Re: 5e3 hum
Do you know if it's 60Hz or 120Hz? 60Hz is roughly B below your low E string and 120Hz is about 4th fret on your low E.
Got a picture to show us?
Got a picture to show us?
Re: 5e3 hum
Check how the tone circuit is grounded or not. Seems I remember having a problem in that area before with a misplaced connection bleeding my signal to ground. It hums because of the loop.
Also I remember building off a cieratone layout where the ouput section ground was looped through the tagboard to the preamp grounds creating a loop. Check out the original fender 5e3 circuit schematic and ground as per. I had a horrible hum until I discovered that and it made me mad. You owe it to yourself to get a Jensen Electric lightning 12" to mate up to it, you'll be glad you did.
Also I remember building off a cieratone layout where the ouput section ground was looped through the tagboard to the preamp grounds creating a loop. Check out the original fender 5e3 circuit schematic and ground as per. I had a horrible hum until I discovered that and it made me mad. You owe it to yourself to get a Jensen Electric lightning 12" to mate up to it, you'll be glad you did.
"It Happens"
Forrest Gump
Forrest Gump
- Noval_novice
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Re: 5e3 hum
Thanks for the suggestions. It was just due to my sloppy V1 wiring. My filament heater wires (and the artificial center tap) happened to be extremely close (read "touching") pin 6 of V1 --> presto! Hum city!
Re: 5e3 hum
Yeah, 60Hz. That's why I asked. It tells you where to look. Glad you got it.
- Noval_novice
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Re: 5e3 hum
Phil,
Just to be totally dense, what sections of the amp are likely to cause 60Hz noise and which are likely to cause 120Hz noise?
Just to be totally dense, what sections of the amp are likely to cause 60Hz noise and which are likely to cause 120Hz noise?
Re: 5e3 hum
50 or 60 Hz = mains induced noise from heaters or any AC-carrying wires from the PT.
100 or 120 Hz = recto related buzz from the valve and filtering caps. Usually compounded by signal routing/wiring as well as grounding.
100 or 120 Hz = recto related buzz from the valve and filtering caps. Usually compounded by signal routing/wiring as well as grounding.
- Noval_novice
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2010 11:22 pm
- Location: Tennessee
Re: 5e3 hum
Right. That makes sense. Thanks, guys.
- Noval_novice
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2010 11:22 pm
- Location: Tennessee
Re: 5e3 hum
Ok. So now the amp actually works with both the normal and bright inputs, but at high volume settings I get some fuzzy decay to notes like bacon frying. It is more noticeable with humbuckers than single coils. It is still noticeable if I hook up to an extension cabinet with known good speakers. Cold solder joint? Oscillation? Any ideas? Now if only I could find a chopstick . . . .
Re: 5e3 hum
Could very well be blocking/farting. The 5E3 was designed for nice and easy playing using single coils, not maxxed with big bad modern humbuckers. Too much drive and the cathodyne enters bloatware mode, then recovers slowly.but at high volume settings I get some fuzzy decay to notes like bacon frying. It is more noticeable with humbuckers than single coils.
Correcting this while keeping the 5E3 tone is very easy:
- Add a 100K or more Rs grid stopper to the PI section of the cathodyne (cf. the schemo below). Some go up to 1M.
- Lower coupling caps from 100n to 22n (best with humbuckers), 47n or a combination (22n between V1 and the PI, 47n after the PI).
- You may also play with V1's cathode bypass cap, going from 25µ to 10µ or 4µ7 can give excellent results with humbuckers.
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- Noval_novice
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2010 11:22 pm
- Location: Tennessee
Re: 5e3 hum
If it is blocking distortion from the cathodyne, it is necessary to put higher grid resistors on the power tubes? Right now I have 1.5K in place on both.
Re: 5e3 hum
1K5 is OK. The ugly disto comes between the gain and the PI stage of the cathodyne, not after it.If it is blocking distortion from the cathodyne, it is necessary to put higher grid resistors on the power tubes? Right now I have 1.5K in place on both.
- Noval_novice
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Re: 5e3 hum
Installed the 100K grid stopper on the cathodyne PI but it didn't help. Should I change cap values as suggested above or look for some other problem?
Re: 5e3 hum
Try higher Rs. Some find the right spot at 330K, 470K or even 1M.Installed the 100K grid stopper on the cathodyne PI but it didn't help.
Smaller caps are a must if you use humbuckers, so yes, go ahead.Should I change cap values as suggested above
If the stopper + caps mods don't work...look for some other problem?