AB673 reverb channel would have a 50k load on the 3rd stage. Whereas you’ve got a 1M load, which will double the gain.
Sorry, I'm not understanding....you mean the 1M master volume pot? Or the 1M impedance to ground at the driver input?
The 1M track of your master volume control presents a 1M load to the 3rd stage. ie almost no loading effect.
Whereas in the typical AB763 reverb channel, there’s a 50k trem intensity control after the 3rd stage. The 50k track presents a 50k load on to the 3rd stage. That loads it down, reducing its gain and maximum available voltage swing.
Why is the series negative feedback resistor lower in value than the shunt resistor value, 3k3 and 4k7 respectively?
Ok, thanks...using that formula I changed the shunt to 200 ohms. All that did was defeat the presence control. I may try disconnecting the NFB next... and maybe increasing the NFB resistor?
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Yes, changing the shunt feedback resistor value here to 200R will greatly affect the action of the presence control.
In any such loop, there’s 2 negative feedback resistors, creating a potential divider on the output voltage that being fed back. Lots of people only seem to notice the series resistor (R1 of a potential divider), 3k3 in your schematic, and don’t seem to regard the shunt resistor (R2 of a potential divider), 4k7 in your schematic, as having any bearing on the signal being fed back.
The HRDeluxe/Deville use a 47k series feedback resistor. You changed that to 3k3, I suspect that your rationale for doing that was ill conceived.
I suggest you revert the 200R shunt resistor back to 4k7, and change the 3k3 series resistor to 47k, as per the HRD
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Resistive_divider2.svg