That's the voice of wisdom yelling at you.
Tanks always have to have a ground reference for both input and output >>coils<<, otherwise, current won't flow, springs don't move, and no signal comes out the output. So both input and output coils have to connect to signal ground somewhere. This can be each coil connects to the shell of its RCA jack, or both coils connect to the shell of either the input RCA jack or the output RCA jack, leaving the opposite RCA jack shell not connected. Tanks have models with all the possible connections.
Well, to be clear: the new Mod tank with the 600 ohm input impedance and input insulated did not work. My buddy's spare Mod tank with a 150 ohm input impedance and a grounded input DID work.Still trying to understand that because as Stevem says, a "4F" tank (1475 input) should work...? So why would a 150 ohm tank work and not a 600 ohm tank work if a 1475 ohm tank works? Do you think the tank's input needs to be grounded (despite the schem indicating insulated tank input)? Maybe that's why the 600 ohm tank doesn't work?
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It's also possible to not wire the shield on either the input cable or output cable. Thomas Organ did this, not wiring the ground/shield on the drive/send side. The considerations of which cable(s) to leave ground/shield open on get into some subtleties. Thomas not running the signal ground along the send cable to the reverb tank input jack means that to get current to flow into the input/driven coil in the tank, the input coil >>must<< have its nominally grounded side connected to the shell of the return RCA jack or nothing will happen. This is along the lines of Martin's comment. If your tank does not have an internal connection between the ground side of the coils to the shell of the return RCA jack, no signal gets into the input/driven coil and therefore no signal comes out.
This sounds complicated, but in fact a few minutes with an ohmmeter to read resistance between the center and shell connections inside the tank itself will tell the entire story. You might flip the non-working tanks upside down and just measure the coil resistances, the resistance between the two RCA jack signal pins, and the resistance between the two RCA jack shell solder tabs. If there's no continuity between the two RCA jack shell connections, the Thomas single-wire send to the input coil will leave the coil open circuited, and nothing will happen. But if the resistance of either coil from RCA center pin to shell is open circuit, it's an open coil.
I don't think so. Q202 would be the most vulnerable. But it's unlikely to hurt it.Another question: will I be damaging the reverb send circuit (specifically Q201 and Q202 transistors) using a lower input impedance tank like this 150 ohm one? As a reminder, this is an early Buckingham (V112).
It's not normal so much as there is a minimum level of hum possible given Thomas Organ's design of the grounding. Just so I'm clear - is this with the friend's reverb tank installed? Or do you also get it with the non-functional tank you bought installed? Or with no tank attached at all?I also noticed a hum when switching the brilliant or the normal channels to reverb. I presume this is normal? Could this hum be improved somehow? Maybe new transistors for Q201 and Q202?






