Hi Everybody,
I was working on a Fender BF style amp today.
I was feeding a 1V peak to peak sine wave into the input.
When I turned the amps volume to 0, the sine was still well audible.
I experienced something like this before in other (Fender) amps, where some signal is audible despite the volume set to 0.
So I checked with my oszilloscope.
No signal at the mixing resistors, no signal at the input of the phase inverter.
But the signal was on both outputs of the phase inverter....
I also checked that the power supply was stable.
The amp works very fine though if you use it with a guitar!
Any hint?
Stephan
"ghost" amplification...
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
Re: "ghost" amplification...
1Vpp is too much. Turn it down to about 0.1Vpp or 0.2Vpp.
- Littlewyan
- Posts: 1944
- Joined: Thu Sep 12, 2013 6:50 pm
- Location: UK
Re: "ghost" amplification...
Isn't this normally due to a poor grounding scheme? Old Marshall 1987 or 1959s do this on the High Treble channel
Re: "ghost" amplification...
An unbypassed (or poorly bypassed), shared cathode resistor will pass signal to the other triode.
I build and repair tube amps. http://amps.monkeymatic.com