

Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal


Bypassed the mess on the front end into the 1m resistor and the tone is more balanced however I find the volume on the input 1 low and idea how to boost gain a little?modman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 15, 2018 9:08 pm R43 is the resistor of the negative feedback loop
Adding a pot after this resistor, with the wiper connected to a 100nF capacitor which in turn goes to ground, makes a presence control. It will allow you to vary the amount of bass that is 'fed back'.
You could also play with C16 the tone stack cap... better still you could change it James tonestack or Fender/Vox is you like scooped mids.
I would also lower the resistance on the input, or even jumper all that shit and plug in at the 1M resistor to ground, easier still: convert input 2 and 1 for guitar.
Jumper the resistors in front of the volume pot: R17/18. Don't jumper those 0.025µF capacitors -- they are used to block HV DC from the next stage.lpd wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 2:19 amBypassed the mess on the front end into the 1m resistor and the tone is more balanced however I find the volume on the input 1 low and idea how to boost gain a little?modman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 15, 2018 9:08 pm R43 is the resistor of the negative feedback loop
Adding a pot after this resistor, with the wiper connected to a 100nF capacitor which in turn goes to ground, makes a presence control. It will allow you to vary the amount of bass that is 'fed back'.
You could also play with C16 the tone stack cap... better still you could change it James tonestack or Fender/Vox is you like scooped mids.
I would also lower the resistance on the input, or even jumper all that shit and plug in at the 1M resistor to ground, easier still: convert input 2 and 1 for guitar.
Tried soldering a 1m from input one 1/4 jack to c4 but no sound any idea why? I jumpered input 2 to the 1 meg resistor no problem. Any ideas?modman wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 8:21 amJumper the resistors in front of the volume pot: R17/18. Don't jumper those 0.025µF capacitors -- they are used to block HV DC from the next stage.lpd wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 2:19 amBypassed the mess on the front end into the 1m resistor and the tone is more balanced however I find the volume on the input 1 low and idea how to boost gain a little?modman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 15, 2018 9:08 pm R43 is the resistor of the negative feedback loop
Adding a pot after this resistor, with the wiper connected to a 100nF capacitor which in turn goes to ground, makes a presence control. It will allow you to vary the amount of bass that is 'fed back'.
You could also play with C16 the tone stack cap... better still you could change it James tonestack or Fender/Vox is you like scooped mids.
I would also lower the resistance on the input, or even jumper all that shit and plug in at the 1M resistor to ground, easier still: convert input 2 and 1 for guitar.
As is you always will have the 220k in the signal path, even if the pot is turned all the way up, i.e. 0 ohm resistance.
Don't put a 1M resistor in line with signal, it will kill it completely. Just connect input to the front of that capacitor with a jumper/alligator clip.lpd wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 2:30 pmTried soldering a 1m from input one 1/4 jack to c4 but no sound any idea why? I jumpered input 2 to the 1 meg resistor no problem. Any ideas?modman wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 8:21 amJumper the resistors in front of the volume pot: R17/18. Don't jumper those 0.025µF capacitors -- they are used to block HV DC from the next stage.
As is you always will have the 220k in the signal path, even if the pot is turned all the way up, i.e. 0 ohm resistance.
Mine is that amp plus a triode for a reverb stage. The first input is low volume. Second input sounds great and third is way too much gain as the reverb circuit was pulled from the amp. I jumpered both input 1&2 with alligator clips to the 1 M resistor bypassing the rest of the input circuit and it was a much cleaner signal. When i soldered a permanent jumper things stopped working on input 1 ?? I tried to bypass the 1m resistor and go from input to c4 with 1m but it killed the signal. Also noticed lowering Guitar pickups improved things immensely in bass output. It has a Princeton type clean not a lot of gain except the third input. Will test more todaymodman wrote: ↑Sat Mar 17, 2018 9:36 amDon't put a 1M resistor in line with signal, it will kill it completely. Just connect input to the front of that capacitor with a jumper/alligator clip.lpd wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 2:30 pmTried soldering a 1m from input one 1/4 jack to c4 but no sound any idea why? I jumpered input 2 to the 1 meg resistor no problem. Any ideas?modman wrote: ↑Fri Mar 16, 2018 8:21 am
Jumper the resistors in front of the volume pot: R17/18. Don't jumper those 0.025µF capacitors -- they are used to block HV DC from the next stage.
As is you always will have the 220k in the signal path, even if the pot is turned all the way up, i.e. 0 ohm resistance.
This amp?