Hi Ed,
It may help a bit if you understand just how a presence control works.
Fist off, a presence control is a Negative FeedBack with a tone control.
The negative feedback (NFB) takes a sample signal from the speaker out (this signal is inverted compared to the incoming signal to the phase inverter) and inserts it to the cathode.
because the signal is inverted, it cancels out the incoming signal. since the signals arent exactly the same and are not phased (timed) exactly the signal isn't cancelled 100%, it just dampened or muted.
So when we add a tone circuit (the 5Kpot and .1 cap) we cut certain frequencies out of the sampled signal.
those missing frequencies (mid-range in this case) do not dampen the incoming signal and so those frequencies seem more pronounced.
SO:
Changing the capacitor value affects the tone, lowering the values passes higher frequencies to ground and the result will be a brighter sound.
changing the NFB resistor (56K) changes how much.
I'm not one of the Forum's Technical Gurus so I may have missed a few details, but I did experiment around with a NFB circuit on a small amp (5F2A) I built so I could understand this concept a lot better.
OH!
You can put a switch between the speaker connection and the 56K. this will remove NFB and defeat the presence. Effect is louder and less headroom.
You can sub a 20K resistor and a 25K A taper pot for the 56K. wire the center lug the speaker and one of the other lugs to the 20K, leave one of the outside lugs open.
OH!
I found these two links to be VERY useful,
http://www.diystompboxes.com/pedals/tubedummy.htmlhttp://www.aikenamps.com/AmpTerms.htmlI still refer to these places to make sure I'm on the same page when I get replies to questions I have.
Ray