
SavageRiffer
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Sounds better than the first video. I like the low mid range presence. Badass build man.
SavageRiffer":382m0s3g said:Sounds better than the first video. I like the low mid range presence. Badass build man.
FourT6and2":94isggej said:SavageRiffer":94isggej said:Sounds better than the first video. I like the low mid range presence. Badass build man.
Thanks![]()
The next one will be cool, too. Maybe a slightly different voicing. We'll see.
SavageRiffer":328u2jna said:FourT6and2":328u2jna said:SavageRiffer":328u2jna said:Sounds better than the first video. I like the low mid range presence. Badass build man.
Thanks![]()
The next one will be cool, too. Maybe a slightly different voicing. We'll see.
Good idea. Sell this one to me dirt cheap and build a new one.
Yup, you could tweak for days. I get ear fatigue pretty quickly and can't do many mods before my ears are shot. I've often thought that I tend to 'mod it until it sounds bad' lol.FourT6and2":1geis9mi said:haha! yeah at some point I gotta say enough is enough lol![]()
The grid resistor value typically varies from as low as 1.5K to as high as 470K.
Most output stages use relatively small grid resistors, such as the 1.5K seen on the grids of 6L6 tubes in most Fenders, and the 5.6K seen on the grids of EL34 tubes in most Marshalls. In general, the grid resistor at the grid of the power tubes can be as high as 56K to 100K before any noticeable loss of high frequencies occurs. Higher values can help in reducing "blocking" distortion as noted above, and can also take some of the "edge" off of an overly brittle sounding output stage. If the resistor value is made too low, it may not be enough to prevent parasitic oscillations, and the amplifier may exhibit instability in the higher frequency range. This may or may not be audible. Symptoms of oscillations include: high-pitched "squeal", glowing plates at "safe" bias currents, harsh treble response, lack of power, undesirable overtones, and unusual frequency response which makes the amp sound funny. Note that power tubes have a specification for maximum resistance that can be in series with the grid terminal before the tube becomes unstable due to grid current. The maximum allowable resistance is larger in cathode biased circuits than it is in fixed bias circuits because the cathode bias provides some "self-limiting" protection against bias runaway. The total resistance is the sum of the series grid resistor and the bias feed or "grid-to-ground" resistances, so if the max spec is 300K, for example, and there is a 220K bias feed resistor, the largest grid resistance that can safely be used is 80K. Of course, in practice, tubes should not be run that close to the edge of their specifications, to insure reliability.
SpiderWars":y0rte70p said:Yup, you could tweak for days. I get ear fatigue pretty quickly and can't do many mods before my ears are shot. I've often thought that I tend to 'mod it until it sounds bad' lol.FourT6and2":y0rte70p said:haha! yeah at some point I gotta say enough is enough lol![]()
TBH, I'd be surprised if you can hear the difference between 1k5 and 5k6 on the grids of the power tubes. I've always read that it could be way higher with no noticable difference but will admit to not doing any real tests.
From our good friend Randall Aiken:
The grid resistor value typically varies from as low as 1.5K to as high as 470K.
Most output stages use relatively small grid resistors, such as the 1.5K seen on the grids of 6L6 tubes in most Fenders, and the 5.6K seen on the grids of EL34 tubes in most Marshalls. In general, the grid resistor at the grid of the power tubes can be as high as 56K to 100K before any noticeable loss of high frequencies occurs. Higher values can help in reducing "blocking" distortion as noted above, and can also take some of the "edge" off of an overly brittle sounding output stage. If the resistor value is made too low, it may not be enough to prevent parasitic oscillations, and the amplifier may exhibit instability in the higher frequency range. This may or may not be audible. Symptoms of oscillations include: high-pitched "squeal", glowing plates at "safe" bias currents, harsh treble response, lack of power, undesirable overtones, and unusual frequency response which makes the amp sound funny. Note that power tubes have a specification for maximum resistance that can be in series with the grid terminal before the tube becomes unstable due to grid current. The maximum allowable resistance is larger in cathode biased circuits than it is in fixed bias circuits because the cathode bias provides some "self-limiting" protection against bias runaway. The total resistance is the sum of the series grid resistor and the bias feed or "grid-to-ground" resistances, so if the max spec is 300K, for example, and there is a 220K bias feed resistor, the largest grid resistance that can safely be used is 80K. Of course, in practice, tubes should not be run that close to the edge of their specifications, to insure reliability.
jsp":b8d5jly3 said:Sounds great. That last vid sounds especially mean.
psychodave":9y4o9e9n said:Sounds great.
duesentrieb":192ajcvo said:Congrats Mike. Looks awesome (neater than a Larry lol) and sounds great.
duesentrieb":r5vlxply said:I haven't heard all of them, will do Mike.
You desperately need better Cs than these Micas though, go with Muratas instead.
Personally I often use 39k for most dist. channels, no scientific approach, just preference over all the builds I've done.
marcus262":34lrl146 said:As for slope resistor values, 33k, 35k, 39k sound good with different flavours,
I just don't like 47k very much, sounds too modern and scooped for my taste.
1nF cap with a 150k resistor makes a low pass filter around 1kHz, so without 1nf cap you would have much more frequencies beyond 1khz, and so also
more agression and gain. The only problem I can think of here is that it may sound great on medium gain settings but higher gain setting may start to get fizzy, don't know if you tried.
so, 1nf acts like a snubber cap, and many amp with 3 or more gain stages that have cathode bypass capacitor on all stages utilize some sort of snubber from values of 100pf, 470pf, 1nf, ex. Diezel Vh4, Bogner Shiva, Friedman BE100... to help with the fizz.
CrazyNutz":1dbxrvlk said:Sounds better. I like either 33k, or 39k for the slope. 33k sounds more marshally, and not surprisingly 39k sounds more VH4'ish. Put'em on a switch!
BTW I agree with what duesentrieb said about the mica caps. I find myself liking ceramics better (in almost all circuits) ceramics really add some pleasant grit, and dimension.
FourT6and2":16d9l0u4 said:I was thinking of installing a little trim pot on the board for the slope. But I'm not positive. A switch would be cool, too.