Sorry for the bombarding of topics. I deleted my previous thread to try and focus on figuring this out and hopefully learning something along the way. This has been bugging me so bad. I know this circuit like the back of my hand. I have the entire schematic memorized. After going over my build for probably 6 hours straight and not finding anything it really played a toll on my confidence ha ha.
So the only thing I can think is, somewhere, somehow, i wasnt getting a very good connection. Maybe I didnt crimp a wire around a tube socket. Maybe it was on of my wires coming off my board, which were soldered underneath. Using 18 awg solid i can only put the wire in the bottom of the turret so far and solder it.
Ok so even with a bad connection, could that explain the TREMOLO I was getting. Master volume after 9 oclock. Pre amp volume close to max. It was dependent on how hard I strum. If I strum the guitar light, it wasnt so noticeable. If I hit the strings harder, It was an actual tremolo. Just like the ones in my little 5 watt with trem. Ok so leaky coupling caps or filter caps cause motorboating. Is what Im getting a form of motorboating? I changed ALL caps. However...heres another scenario.
My filtering has a dual cap can for the choke. In and out. This cap can was used. Not very though. It was even banged up. from getting dropped I think. Tested ok with my cap meter. Now when I originally had the amp problem, this was the first thing I changed. I just temporarily soldered two 16uf caps in place of the cap can. It didn't seem to change anything so then I put it back. Went on to tinker with the amp. Had a ground issue. Got sound. Got full volume. Still lacking gain and then the tremolo problem occurred. I changed every cap on the board except here i am with the dual cap that I once changed but put back. I figured when I changed it the first time I didnt get any change in the amp so I put it back...but that was before I uncovered what I think was a different problem.
So after changing all these caps on board and leaving this dual cap, could it be the culprit for the tremolo? Filter caps are the only thing I can think of. At this point I dont even care about the amp. I already took it apart. Going to re wire it. I just cant sit still until I understand what the heck is happening.
Maybe I need to look past the "but this is a new part" way of thinking. Maybe my "new" choke is going bad. Im using a 20 hy Classic tone choke. I dont know maybe thats going bad somehow. Beats me. But I have a Hammond 5 hy that works fine on my breadboard. Maybe I'll put that in and see.