Some months ago I wrote about an amp I bought, unseen. FInally I have the amp at hand, and - voilá - a schematic.
The amp works, but seemingly have a slight tendency of instability at max volume.....
Anybody know this scematic, or have any comments???
Mystery amp
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Mystery amp
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- Littlewyan
- Posts: 1944
- Joined: Thu Sep 12, 2013 6:50 pm
- Location: UK
Re: Mystery amp
Looks like it was inspired by the JTM45, the pre amp anyway, in the sense that it has 2 gain stages, cathode follower (transistor, waste of time) and the same tone stack. The gain stages are set up a bit differently though. How does it sound?
Re: Mystery amp
Except for the light warble at max volume, it sounds OK to me, - but - I'm an electronics geek, not a guitar man. I originally bought this amp to use it as parts for a Rocketish build for my son, but now I don't know....
Re: Mystery amp
What? Why a waste of time? Looks like it serves exactly the same purpose as the valve cathode follower in the JTM45.Littlewyan wrote:cathode follower (transistor, waste of time)
See RG's article: http://www.geofex.com/Article_Folders/m ... tfolly.htm
I build and repair tube amps. http://amps.monkeymatic.com
- Littlewyan
- Posts: 1944
- Joined: Thu Sep 12, 2013 6:50 pm
- Location: UK
Re: Mystery amp
A valve cathode follower can be pushed into a nice non linear distortion. A transistor however will stay linear no matter how hard you push it so won't provide the same benefit. When it comes to distortion anyway.
Re: Mystery amp
Check this link out if you want a solid-state follower to work like a hollow-state follower.
http://milas.spb.ru/~kmg/irf_en.html
Regards
RB
http://milas.spb.ru/~kmg/irf_en.html
Regards
RB