Hoffman Amplifiers Tube Amplifier Forum

Amp Stuff => Tube Amp Building - Tweaks - Repairs => Topic started by: joesatch on December 01, 2021, 01:29:13 pm

Title: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 01, 2021, 01:29:13 pm
Does anyone have diagrams of this? There are several threads online but all are dead when i click on the image. 2204 build
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: RadioComm on December 01, 2021, 01:50:20 pm
From personal www search, here's couple of Marshall links:
https://www.thegearpage.net/board/index.php?threads/69-73-marshall-superlead-larry-grounding-scheme-diagram.2196688/
https://www.thegearpage.net/board/index.php?threads/good-grounding-layout-for-jcm800-2204-style-build-larry-or-star-ground.1821309/

Saw @pdf64 and @HotBluePlates as members on one of the threads at www.thegearpage.net

Also got some results by searching directly in this forum...

Hope this helps... ttfn
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 01, 2021, 01:59:18 pm
Thanks well i guess this is the best i can find. Not a great shot but some interesting things here. The master and pre grounds are isolated from the tone pot grounds.  The heater CT is grounded to the input jack? huh?

(http://i.imgur.com/xKqt1RB.jpg)
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 01, 2021, 02:51:50 pm
The master and pre grounds are isolated from the tone pot grounds.  The heater CT is grounded to the input jack? huh?

Who is this Larry?

It may work, but it doesn't make any sense.

Someone just posted here that they learned from Doug, to ground the heaters at the input jacks, I don't recall seeing Doug do that? Maybe he did? 
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 01, 2021, 02:53:24 pm
The master and pre grounds are isolated from the tone pot grounds.  The heater CT is grounded to the input jack? huh?

Who is this Larry?

It may work, but it doesn't make any sense.

Someone just posted here that they learned from Doug, to ground the heaters at the input jacks, I don't recall seeing Doug do that? Maybe he did?

uncle Doug from youtube? I dont know Larry either . Maybe he's Doug's cousin
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 01, 2021, 03:15:21 pm
Someone just posted here that they learned from Doug, to ground the heaters at the input jacks, I don't recall seeing Doug do that? Maybe he did?

uncle Doug from youtube? I dont know Larry either.
No, I thought he meant our forum host,  Doug.

Maybe he's Doug's cousin.
:laugh:
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: sluckey on December 01, 2021, 03:15:48 pm
Larry is Darryl's brother. He also has another brother named Darryl. The trio is about as smart as a rock.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 01, 2021, 03:16:51 pm
Why do you want to use Larry's grounding, when you don't know who he is or anything about him?


 
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 01, 2021, 03:17:56 pm
Larry is Darryl's brother. He also has another brother named Darryl. The trio is about as smart as a rock.

"And this is my other brother Darryl."   :laugh:
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: acheld on December 01, 2021, 09:42:17 pm
No, no no.   :BangHead:

That was Larry!  from Larry, Moe and Curly.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: thetragichero on December 01, 2021, 11:00:20 pm
paging dr howard, dr fine, dr howard?
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 02, 2021, 09:13:54 am
All kidding aside. The Larry Grounding scheme is supposedly the best for Plexi's and JCM's to reduce noise. I just wish i could find a good resource for it. Everything i see online is a several year old thread with broken links.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: acheld on December 02, 2021, 09:52:56 am
Quote
The Larry Grounding scheme is supposedly the best for Plexi's and JCM's to reduce noise.

Not sure I would agree with this statement.   I am sure it has worked for someone in their build, but don't generalize. You could probably make it work. . .

Quote
I just wish i could find a good resource for it. Everything i see online is a several year old thread with broken links.

This, in itself, should tell you something.

Honestly, do yourself a favor and read:  http://www.valvewizard.co.uk/Grounding.pdf     Merlin is a "real" (as opposed to Larry Fine) engineer doing this stuff for a living.     Then, study Doug Hoffmans build documents for his Plexi's.   His grounding scheme incorporates many, but not all, valvewizard concepts.   Doug's scheme has worked well for decades.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: PharmRock on December 02, 2021, 11:26:41 am
I've got a JTM45 build that at the moment is basically a pile of parts on my bench waiting to be assembled.  Over the past couple of months I've done some research on various forums regarding this circuit and potential mods, and also came across the "Larry" grounding scheme.  Seems that the Larry scheme started way back in 2009 or so on the Metro forums, where Larry ("novosibir") provides some of his rationale.  Reading through all the threads, a lot of people swear by how quiet the amp is using this scheme.  For many of the threads, a lot of the images are dead links, but I've found a lot of images doing a google search on "Larry Grounding Metro".

Having said all that, a lot of what is mentioned in the "Larry" scheme seems to be very similar in principle to what is covered by Merlin and Aiken.  The only really weird thing about the Larry scheme seems to be grounding the heater CT at the input jack ground point. 

I wonder if a fair amount of the reduced noise from implementing this scheme is actually do to other factors that are implemented when the grounding changes take place, such as tidier wire routing, shielded cable, etc. 

Last spring I built a 1987/2204 that used a ground bus for the preamp section tied to the input, similar to what several people on this forum have posted (e.g. see Sluckey's Dual Lite and Phoenix pics).  I also implemented elevated heaters.  The amp is remarkably quiet at idle. 

Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: pdf64 on December 02, 2021, 11:34:14 am
Several, or even multiple connections between circuit 0V and the chassis, and relying on the chassis as a 0V conductor, seems a bit haphazard to me.
A single 0V to chassis connection, with a single 0V wire conductor and all soldered connections to it, seems a better engineering solution.
Mike at Modulus has drawn a layout showing how that might practically be implemented on a Marshall type amp build.
(https://i.ibb.co/8rLjkbw/Modulus-MR34-Layout10241024-1.png)
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: PharmRock on December 02, 2021, 11:39:57 am
Here's another image that may help....shows the various ground points and what goes where.  First post in the thread.
http://forum.metropoulos.net/viewtopic.php?t=31323 (http://forum.metropoulos.net/viewtopic.php?t=31323)
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 02, 2021, 01:30:07 pm
there are some weird things that's doing. Grounding the volumes to a normal spot but then Grounding the tone pots to the power section Cap can but also to the speaker jacks? Grounding the heater CT to the input jacks?  so weird

(http://i661.photobucket.com/albums/uu332/DDBone_01/Metro%2012%20Series/100w-plexi-Grounding-2.jpg)
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 02, 2021, 03:31:05 pm
Having said all that, a lot of what is mentioned in the "Larry" scheme seems to be very similar in principle to what is covered by Merlin and Aiken.  The only really weird thing about the Larry scheme seems to be grounding the heater CT at the input jack ground point.

There's more than that, he has tone pots grounded in a different place than the volume controls, they should be grounded together.

And he has the speaker jacks grounded to the tone pots.

And he has 5 chassis ground connections. Like pdf64 said, the less chassis connections the better.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: pdf64 on December 02, 2021, 04:01:14 pm
The heater connection is just a reference, no current flows, it could be anywhere that isn’t too noisy, really.
It’s a totally different thing to, eg, the HT winding CT.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: PharmRock on December 02, 2021, 04:07:23 pm
There's more than that,

I was mainly referring to the general principle that Aiken describes on his website, where one would have multiple ground points throughout the chassis and physically separate them on the chassis "upstream" from one another at a distance that minimizes ground loops: "If more than two star points are used, the additional points should be physically located between the output stage star point and the first preamp star point, and should be located on the ground terminal of the power supply capacitor used for decoupling of that particular stage." (Aiken)

Certainly no expert here, but certain aspects of the Larry scheme seem similar to what I've been trying to educate myself on via Merlin's books and other sites/forums.  But some of the implementation is definitely not in alignment with the resources either.

It begs the question as to how he came up with the scheme.  While there's some aspects that make sense, others don't.  Wonder if he just "played around" with different ground points for different sections and somehow stumbled upon a "magic formula", at least for the plexi-style circuits anyways. A lot of builders who've implemented it (at least the ones posting about it) swear its the quietest they've had. 

As for me...I'll go with 1) what I know works in my experience and 2) what is supported with reliable resources (e.g. Merlin/Aiken/this forum).
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 02, 2021, 04:21:42 pm
The heater connection is just a reference, no current flows, it could be anywhere that isn’t too noisy, really.
It’s a totally different thing to, eg, the HT winding CT.

Fine, but why would I want to run a PT CT wire all the way across the chassis from the PT end to the input jack?

If it makes no difference, then why not keep heater CT wire as short as possible?

Not very practical.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Willabe on December 02, 2021, 04:33:33 pm
I was mainly referring to the general principle that Aiken describes on his website, where one would have multiple ground points throughout the chassis and physically separate them on the chassis "upstream" from one another at a distance that minimizes ground loops: "If more than two star points are used, the additional points should be physically located between the output stage star point and the first preamp star point, and should be located on the ground terminal of the power supply capacitor used for decoupling of that particular stage." (Aiken)

Well, he says; "If more than two star points are used...", indicating a less preferable option. And; "... should be located on the ground terminal of the power supply capacitor used for decoupling of that particular stage." The tone pots and volume pots should be grounded with the same B+ filter cap that feeds that tube. He split them so there not on the same filter cap. And Aiken makes a strong point on dealing with the OT speaker jack ground wire. Larry has the OT grounded with the tone pots, strange. OT secondary has the most current in the amp.   

It begs the question as to how he came up with the scheme.  While there's some aspects that make sense, others don't.  Wonder if he just "played around" with different ground points for different sections and somehow stumbled upon a "magic formula", at least for the plexi-style circuits anyways. A lot of builders who've implemented it (at least the ones posting about it) swear its the quietest they've had.

Very well could be.  :dontknow:
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 02, 2021, 04:41:40 pm
It begs the question as to how he came up with the scheme.  While there's some aspects that make sense, others don't.  Wonder if he just "played around" with different ground points for different sections and somehow stumbled upon a "magic formula", at least for the plexi-style circuits anyways. A lot of builders who've implemented it (at least the ones posting about it) swear its the quietest they've had.

Very well could be.  :dontknow:
[/quote]

I'm guessing he jumpered sections until the noise stopped FOR HIS BUILD not necessarily applicable to the circuit or other's builds..
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: darryl on December 13, 2021, 04:20:02 am
Larry is Darryl's brother. He also has another brother named Darryl. The trio is about as smart as a rock.
Hey! Stop picking on my brother's brother.   :angry:
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 13, 2021, 06:11:14 am
I'm implementing this grounding scheme. Doesn't feel  right running the cap can ground across the chassis but we'll see
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: pdf64 on December 13, 2021, 07:44:46 am
… OT secondary has the most current in the amp.   

The 0V connection for the OT secondary’s common is just a reference, ie no load current should flow there.
Due to the voltage sample for the feedback, there will be a tiny bit of secondary current there though.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding - My name is Larry
Post by: Voxbox on December 13, 2021, 01:02:57 pm
My Name is Larry (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FvLikiVraHE) by Wild Man Fisher.



I heard this on John Peel on BBC Radio1 in the 70s and have never forgotten it for some reason...........
 :laugh:


Cheers, VB
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: sluckey on December 13, 2021, 01:41:59 pm
...

Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: joesatch on December 13, 2021, 02:02:38 pm
i dont know much about the grounding scheme, folks call it Larry. Maybe it was named after Larry Hagman?

(https://thumbs.gfycat.com/ShamelessWellwornGoral.webp)
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: Voxbox on December 13, 2021, 02:19:10 pm
...



Now I know what y'all are on about  :laugh:
Never saw this in the UK.
Title: Re: Larry Grounding
Post by: shooter on December 14, 2021, 03:56:01 am
Quote
Never saw this in the UK.
Here In farm country MI, it's a normal occurrence to run into one of the brothers at the beerbaitngas  :icon_biggrin: