A friend of mine gave me some parts he intended to use to build an 18 watt 6V6 push pull amp with a JCM-800 preamp. He had these parts for about 2 years and finally decided that he was not going to build it. He gave me a populated turret board, a bunch of high quality resistors, 3 Can Caps, a choke, cliff jacks, fuse holders, potentiometers, power switch, standby switch, tube sockets, nuts and bolts, and a heavy duty 17 x 8 x 2.5 aluminum chassis. He also included a nice face plate.
The only parts I needed to buy were knobs and transformers. I bought the 18 watt Marshall style transformers from Classic Tone.
After getting everything assembled and connected, I fired it up. The bias was perfect with the bias adjust pot right in the middle. Plate voltage is about 390v with plate current is about 27 ma. It worked on the first try, but had a lot of AC hum.
Here are the troubleshooting steps I used to try to get rid of the hum:
1. Connected all grounds and heater center tap to star ground with ground bus wire soldered to back of pots.
2. Separated the power amp and pre amp grounds with heater center tap connected to the power amp ground.
3. Created artificial center tap and attached to Power Amp ground
4. Removed artificial center tap, re-attached heater center tap to power amp ground and un-soldered ground bus wire from the back of pots.
5. Re-routed the heater wires so they don’t come close to B+ wires.
6. Attached heater center tap to elevated heaters (AX84 style).
7. Used shielded wires on first preamp tube, removed 68K resistor from the circuit board and soldered it directly to the socket of V1. The hum was finally gone!!!
If I had tried step number 7 first, I probably would have save a lot of time and frustration.
When unsoldering the original wire that goes from the 68K resistor to the input of V1, I noticed that the wire was almost broken in two. There was only one strand left on the wire. I am thinking this could have caused the AC hum. I already had the rg-174 coax cut and ready to install, so I decided to go ahead and use the shielded wire for the two inputs to V1. I will probably use shielded wire on the inputs of V1 on future builds.
It sounds great!! I am very pleased with the results of this build. The layout is based on the Mojo JCM800 2204.
Mike