Hello guys,
I've been lurking for a little bit and have scoured the forum for related topics. I couldn't find what I was looking for however so I decided to create my own :).
I've had this tube amp for more than 10 years now. I'm its first owner. It is a guitar amp with four 12ax7 and four el34. You can find the schematic on the web easily:
https://www.thetubestore.com/lib/thetubestore/schematics/Laney/Laney-GH100L-Schematic.pdfThis amp had a power tube failure 10 years ago where the anode came in contact with the screen. It made a huge spark while rehearsing and killed the fuse. I've used it with only one pair of power tubes for years following that.
I decided to dust it off a couple of months ago, put in new tubes and set the bias voltage. I bought these tubes in 2013 and haven't used them since. I chose 4 EH preamp tubes and two matched pairs of EH el34. Here are the el34 characteristics as given by the supplier:
G1[-V] | H2C | S | G | G1 |
44 | 0 | 6.3 | 1.3 | 1.87 |
44 | 8 | 5.6 | 1.8 | 1.38 |
44 | 0 | 6.2 | 2.2 | 1.13 |
44 | 0 | 6.6 | 2 | 1.25 |
After having installed them, I realized that this amp had quite a bit of 50/100Hz hum. This probably comes by-design on this amp, 100W isn't exactly meant to be used as a bedroom amp. But I am now a bedroom guitarist, and I've decided to try and address that.
I've already chased down a couple of problems, notably:
- A 1k5 4W screen resistor was cracked open, probably following the tube short incident. I've replaced it.
- The master volume pot was faulty, changed it.
- I changed nearly all the important electrolytic caps, I don't think it had an impact (older ones were still good).
- I have 240Vac at home instead of the 230Vac this amp is meant to take.
- A good amount of hum seemed to come from the heater. It depended heavily on what preamp tubes I would use. I've modified a PC SMPS to output 6.2Vdc. I now use it to power my heaters (el34 included) and it seems to works fine. The hum diminished drastically.
- I've installed 1R precision resistors on one pair of el34, cathode side, so that I can measure the cathode current and deduce the idle anode current.
- I've set the bias voltage around -42V so that there's a 36mA anode current (Ik - Iscreen) flowing in those tubes at idle.
However, some hum remains, and it's still loud enough to bother when everything else is silent. This hum is present with v1, v2 and v3 removed (only the PI (v4) and the output tubes are plugged). If I remove v4 (power tubes only), it goes down to lower levels. It disappears completely when I finally remove power tubes.
I measure ~4.5Vac between any OT primary wire and ground. This makes sense since anode voltage is taken before the choke. (I measure ~100mVac after the choke). I've added two more 50uF reservoir caps in parallel with those already present at P51, making them 200uF in total, and the ripple voltage drops to ~1.5Vac. At that point, only with power tubes, hum is barely audible and nearly silent. However, it increases significantly when I plug back the PI (v4) tube. And I'm still trying to isolate why.
I've done some more experiments. With v1, v2, v3 removed (v4 to v8 present), desoldering the NFB wire from the OT secondary eliminates that PI hum. This means that the hum comes from the feedback circuitry.
With v1, v2, v3 removed (v4 to v8 present), the hum sound (very) slightly changes by rotating the presence knob. Hum level considerably changes when I enable/disable the resonance switch. The master volume has an influence on hum level too, even with the earlier stages disabled (and input to MV left floating!). At 0 (PI input to GND), hum level is high. As I increase the master volume, hum diminishes and completely disappears between 5 and 7. Turning the pot further makes the hum gradually reappear and it becomes loudest at 10.
Now here's my explanation:
Ripple finds itself injected back into the second LTP input (P27 on the schematic) from the OT through the NFB circuit. As it isn't common mode (this ripple isn't present on the first LTP input - or P24), it isn't rejected by the differential amplifier. When I turn the MV up, some ripple from the previous stages (or from the air when MV input is floating?) is injected into the first LTP input (P24). At this point, it becomes common mode and starts cancelling its image found on the second input (P27). Between volume 5 or 7, ripple levels are matched on both inputs (P24 and P27) and the amp becomes silent. Beyond, first input ripple (P24) takes over.
