Hi all,
Experimenting again and am wondering if anyone wants to chime in on what I'm considering. Both positive and negative comments welcome!
I am going to start building a Princeton Reverb AA1164 and think it would be fun to try some changes. Here's the schematic:
https://schematicheaven.net/fenderamps/princeton_rev_gz34_aa1164.pdfAnyway, I am using a Fender-style eyelet board and I have a Princeton chassis. The power transformer I'm using will have perfect voltages with a solid state rectifier, so I will not be using one of the three octal socket holes for a tube rectifier.
I would also like to try adding a second, differently voiced channel akin to what Rob Robinette suggests below. I have used it on a bunch of other two-channel builds, but would like to try it here. Notes on Robinette's lead channel mod:
https://robrobinette.com/Generic_Tube_Amp_Mods.htm#Lead_ChannelHere is my (early) idea:
1. Use the unused octal socket to house an octal 6SF5, which I would wire as the phase inverter. Its operating characteristics are just about identical to the 12AX7 though it's a single triode tube. That would free up a triode from the three 12AX7s in the circuit. I have a lot of these 6SF5s laying around.
2. To keep everything else where it should be on V1-3, I would then use V4 (which originally was PI and tremolo) for tremolo and the second, new channel.
3. As space will be tight on the faceplate/panel I want to use just one tone stack on both channels, and a single input jack.
So I was thinking about using a dpdt switch to switch the input jack from one channel's input grid to the other; the other half of the switch would run the signal from either channel into the tone stack.
4. I'll probably put the new channel triode on the one unused power rail node.
Questions:
1. Will I have issues running a second channel preamp triode so close to the tremolo?
2. In his post, Robinette recommends swapping the modified channel's coupling cap for a smaller value. His example was from a Deluxe, which has a .022 coupling cap.
The coupling cap on the front end of the Princeton is only 250pf. Inadvisable to go lower, and just switch the signal after the coupling cap?
Any thoughts? Is this crazy or ill-advised? I would love to give it a try.
Thanks!