I still think the Dumbleator is the way to go if you're using the passive FX loop on an ODS and don't want to do wet/dry. Even Larry Carlton has come back to that way of thinking
All good for discussion though and everyone has their own way
M
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
Unshielded, I think they're very close, here's a shot, less than half an inch I'd say?JazzGuitarGimp wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2019 7:01 pm Hi Phil.
How long are the wires between the bright switch and the board? Shielded, or unshielded?
Thanks,
Lou
Yeah that's why I tapped them, to see, but didn't get a specific problem on either. also it's BOTH of the ceramic's doing the noise, not just one. Could it be a switch issue?
I'd have to peek again, but the negative feedback tap is a grey wire coming directly off of the socket that was the one set by the previous amp (I am wondering if there are more than a few things different for this amp vs the hot rod deluxe)JazzGuitarGimp wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 4:54 am Hi Phil,
Looking at your pictures, I see a few things:
- R51 should be 100K, it looks like you’ve got 4.75K in there? Am I reading that right? EDIT: I am not seeing R52 in the pictures, but that is the one that should be 4.75K - is it possible you swapped the value of these two parts?
- the global negative feedback connection should come from the 4-ohm OT tap, which I believe is the GRN/YEL wire. It looks like you are connected to the 8-ohm tap (GRN wire).
Correcting these might help a bit.
Cheers,
Lou
I've tried some of them, I can't recall right now all, I can try to reproduce today and see what I get. I didn't have the chassis cover on it, though, so with LED lights, and an open back and being relatively close to the amp may all be components of this yes. I'll see what I find. (I think I recall the treble pot especially muting it a bit if you dialed it down, but never removing it But I'll test and see.)JazzGuitarGimp wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 5:28 pm Ah, okay - it had slipped my mind that you were building a 183. I think I would leave your NFB circuit as-is for the time being, and look elsewhere for the oscillation. A few questions / suggestions:
- When the oscillation occurs, can you affect it’s frequency by changing the positions of the volume, tone, and pickup selector controls on the guitar, without changing any of amp’s controls?
- Are you using a good-quality cable to connect the guitar to the amp?
- Does moving the guitar as far away from the amp as the cable will allow change the oscillation?
- Have you tried setting the controls to the point where feedback begins, and then push the chassis wires around with a chopstick?
- Have you tried it with the amp completely closed up (I am assuming the amp has a sheet of foil on the inside of the back panel that comes into contact with the chassis flanges to shield the circuitry...)?
We’ll get this figured out...
Cheers,
Lou
hmm yeah that's possible, he was using a warmoth parts tele, and had a fender HSS strat using single coils as well, but the strat I think were some nicer brand I can't remember.norburybrook wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 6:09 pm Phil,
its possible your friends Single coils weren't potted, or not potted very heavily so it was quite microphionic . Your guitar may have more wax or whatever potting and therefore be less microphonic.
just a thought
M
un potted pickups ONLY tend to come from the higher end boutique makers as they're a handful at times because of things like this so mainstream manufacturers always tend to er on the side of caution and pot pickups well.pompeiisneaks wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 6:12 pmhmm yeah that's possible, he was using a warmoth parts tele, and had a fender HSS strat using single coils as well, but the strat I think were some nicer brand I can't remember.norburybrook wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 6:09 pm Phil,
its possible your friends Single coils weren't potted, or not potted very heavily so it was quite microphionic . Your guitar may have more wax or whatever potting and therefore be less microphonic.
just a thought
M
I also did note that my other cable, albeit nice, did have an odd thing, it's a monster cable, but the tip of the tip sleeve part on one end seems to spin freely. I'm guessing it probably doesn't matter as under pressure in a jack it gets forced back into the base, and I'd also get like (0) signal through with a broken signal cable, but maybe that is still allowing for some noise to come in as well?
~Phil
Oh interesting... hmm. I may have to ask him about that. He did say I think both were fancier pickups and he was thinking of reverting to fender stock on the HSS Strat.norburybrook wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 6:19 pmun potted pickups ONLY tend to come from the higher end boutique makers as they're a handful at times because of things like this so mainstream manufacturers always tend to er on the side of caution and pot pickups well.pompeiisneaks wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 6:12 pmhmm yeah that's possible, he was using a warmoth parts tele, and had a fender HSS strat using single coils as well, but the strat I think were some nicer brand I can't remember.norburybrook wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2019 6:09 pm Phil,
its possible your friends Single coils weren't potted, or not potted very heavily so it was quite microphionic . Your guitar may have more wax or whatever potting and therefore be less microphonic.
just a thought
M
I also did note that my other cable, albeit nice, did have an odd thing, it's a monster cable, but the tip of the tip sleeve part on one end seems to spin freely. I'm guessing it probably doesn't matter as under pressure in a jack it gets forced back into the base, and I'd also get like (0) signal through with a broken signal cable, but maybe that is still allowing for some noise to come in as well?
~Phil
M