Oh. YEAH!!! That's the ticket, its got some bark on it now!
While I DID it -- I don't really UNDERSTAND it. Can you tell me why this works?
Thanks danhei.
I highly recommend reading all of Merlin's
document on the triode gain stage but at least take a look at section 1.18 (The Cathode Bypass Capacitor).
In a nutshell, an ordinary triode gain stage without a cathode resistor bypass capacitor operates under internal feedback, reducing the gain and distortion, increasing the headroom and bandwidth. These can be good things for a hifi amp or a clean bass amp!
But for your amp as a guitar amp you need more gain: because it has only two gain stages between the input jacks and the output tubes (the cathodyne phase inverter has unity gain) plus you've got a tone stack in there which will have additional signal loss.
Happily, the single easiest and minimally invasive mod for this amp is to bypass those two 820 ohm resistors with caps, giving you a significant gain boost.
And, if you study Merlin's Fig. 1.26 you can see this also gives you the easiest way to change the bass response. Reducing the value of the cathode bypass cap reduces the low frequency gain back to its non-bypassed value, e.g., a 22uF bypass cap will have a -3dB point around 10-20 Hz, well below guitar and even bass guitar frequencies, and at the lower limit of human hearing. We would consider the stage "fully bypassed" with this value. But a 1uF bypass cap has a -3dB point of about 100 Hz, which would mean it rolls off the lowest notes of the guitar, reducing bass or increasing apparent brightness.
So if you've got bypass caps in the range of 22uF or more and you like the sound but think it's too bassy, try decreasing the caps to 1uF (or even less!). Conversely, if you've got smaller value caps in already and you want it to have a bit more low end, try increasing the caps.
You can also give
this triode calculator a try. I plugged in some values and ran the 12AX7 model, to illustrate what Merlin also shows. You can see unloaded voltage gain around 66 bypassed v. 42 unbypassed.
Note the 6EU7 is functionally identical to a 12AX7 in most applications BUT IT HAS A DIFFERENT PINOUT so don't go swapping 12AX7s into your amp. You'd need to rewire the sockets, which probably isn't worth doing.