Howdy folks!
First post here :). Nice to meet ya all!
A just built (off of Mojo kit) Princeton Reverb is driving me nuts. Just started testing it, it sounded horrible, and, chasing the problem, narrowed it down to the output section.
It seems that I built a... frequency doubler!
Allow me to point you to the scope pictures at the bottom of this post. First one; "grid inputs"; is taken off of the coupling capacitors coming off of the PI towards power tubes (V5,V6). You don't see bias 'cause probes are AC coupled; bias is applied correctly (tested and scoped).
Second one; "One Input And Output"; has yellow probe intact; and green was moved over to the output jack (running into an 8 ohm load resistor box for test purposes).
When I saw that first; I so did not believe my lying eyes, I had to confirm it with a frequency meter: yep; it's doubling the frequency!
What's even more fun is - and I noticed this accidentally and recorded it - during startup; as the amp comes alive and currents start to flow; it seems that it "wants" to do the right thing - but then, negative half cycles of the output flip to be positive. See for yourselves:
I am driving it with 1KHz, 250mV peak to peak sine thru input 1. Volume pot is at about 2.5 (out of 10).
All voltages (checked with no input signal) are within the spec of Mojo's schematic (
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0604/9615/0624/files/Princeton_Reverb_SCH_2.pdf?v=1750277593) with the exception of the Phase Inverter's cathode voltage. They show 15V; mine's in the neighborhood of 50. I thought that was a problem at first; but then realized that it probably is a typo: Fender's schematic is 50V, and my PI output looks good (at the very least; I do see two perfectly legitimate and phase inverted signals past PI's coupling caps). Just to be sure; I checked and re-checked all resistors in that circuit's node as well.
I have attached the schematic with my measured voltages, currents, and notes in the relevant section. Measurements were taken with input signal turned off.
Power transformer's primary sections' DC resistances measure as:
- V5 <-> center tap: 161R
- V6 <-> center tap: 144R
- Total (end to end): 305R. Isn't math a magical thing confirmable by multimeters? ;)
I did incorporate the following mods (all on the schematic):
- power valve's screen and grid stopper resistors
- power valve's adjustable bias (mine is currently set at the schematic's -40V, in my test I did for this post I recorded -41V); I have tried bringing the bias up to increase idle current up to ~30ma (don't want to go higher; afraid to redplate) with no effect on my problem.
- power valve current test resistors (1R, off of cathodes to ground)
For the sake of completeness; other mods also include:
- rectifier's backup diodes
- adjustable bias Rob Robinette style (pot + resistor divider)
- selectable NFB ( "standard" / "low" (5.6K feedback resistor) / "none", in this test; NFB was turned off)
I have tried a few things beyond checking and rechecking voltages; resistance values; currents; and wires going to the right pins:
- swapping power valves to no effect
- swapping a pair of power valves with another pair of 6V6s to no effect; both pairs work fine in a Fender 5E3 Tweed I have around.
I am frankly at a loss. I do not understand what / why / how this can be happening guys... any help would be greatly appreciated.
PS: If you wonder how does this sound.. the best I can describe it is imagine I hid myself in one of those green steel dumpsters, about 1/8-1/4 full with used diapers (for just the correct amount of dampening of course - just like they stuff foam into hifi speakers!), closed the lid, and was banging on a sheet of aluminum? Kinda like that... Another metaphor: "alien TV".
PPS: I might've inadvertently discovered a new guitar effect! Ha. But chords are not playable, you have to play one note at a time and have a long pause in between them... hmmm... I might be onto something ;)