If you haven't already, I'd take out those carbon comp resistors and replace with metal film/ carbon film.
I don't think it's the hissy CC resistors. The amp worked fine and suddenly not. When it worked fine, it worked amazingly well, and barely any noise.
Also, the cloth covered wire wrapped around the turrets: that's a nice clean connection?
I think so? I have checked the resistance with the DMM, and it displays near 0,X at all points from turret top to tube pin.
You keep saying you're getting signal thru to speaker. How much? How loud?
The signal was faint with the Mvol Down, and Vol up, when treble pot was connected directly to the Mvol, bypassing V1B, V2 and V3. With the amp hooked up normally, the volume is bedroom/apartment playing volume, with the Vol Down and Mvol up, or vise versa.
I actually have the master volume wired as a variable resistor, and not a divider.
If that wiper on your MV isn't making good connection, that could be part of the problem? Maybe? Anyway, bypass the MV: unsolder the wire connected to the wiper (middle lug) and connect it to that R23. See how that sounds. Then, clip that wire directly to your chassis. It should then be impossible for any signal to get thru to speaker.
Oh, and probably it doesn't matter, but I'd wire the MV pot exactly like the schematic.
I'll try that. But it's both the volume and master volume pots that has the same "error". So I'm connecting something else is at play here.
Did you install a RAW pot? If so, the Bass pot should not ground. Lug 3 bass pot connects to 1 and 2 of the raw pot via a resistor and then lug 3 of the raw pot makes the tonestack ground. It looks as if the bass pot is grounded, but also connected with a wire to the raw pot. It also appears solder is missing off one of the lugs of the volume pot and it appears to have something connected to lug 1 of the bass pot.
I removed the Raw pot, it's just a 25k pot, as a mid control. It's wired as sluckey suggests it. From Right to left: Jack, Volume, Treble, Bass, Mid, Master, Reverb..
http://sluckeyamps.com/misc/AB763_Deluxe_Lite.pdfShooter, did you have any follow up
I got lost in the weeds, so no.
If it was mine, I'd make the PA section, including PI work, by work I mean, temp in a jack, connect it to the coupling cap into the pi and put music in the jack, after a couple fun hours listening to music, I'd move 1 stage left and repeat. I'd also remove the reverb completely for now, give V3 it's own cathode R instead of sharing, before you know it, you're at the input, then add the verb and go gig
Yeah, the thread is getting long, and without you guys having the amp in front of you, I guess it's nearly impossible to say what's wrong. The suggestions are great, and I have figured a lot on the way.
Although I want to mention, that the amp DID work at one point, with this current configuration. That is why it bothers me. I would have accepted defeat in light of my clear lack of knowledge towards amps. But since it worked, I guess I got something right, even if it was just reading robinettes pages and following a drawing.
I had long thought about separating the cathodes from V2 and V3. So I might end up doing that either way.
I'll give your "work your way backwards"-method a go.. and if all else fails, I'll travel the distance, and get an amp tech to look at my work, or lack there of.
SO.. I think I'm gonna call it guys. Many thanks for all the great tips and help, it means the world, truely.
Kind regards, Christian.