I have in front of me a Garnet LB190D Pro amplifier with the "stinger" fuzz circuit.
Hey mate, You could try a voltage divider before the Pentode input to reduce the signal and/or disconnecting the 25uf bypass cap
I wish it were that easy. The stinger uses a 6AN8 triode/pentode.
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There is no 25 µF bypass cap here.
A different schematic (hosted here) shows the 6JW8 tube for the Stinger circuit, and a different bias method.
Are there any tips or techniques of taming this circuit to be a bit more useable?
I’m still wrapping my head around the design and what’s going on.
Both schematics have a couple things in common: apply a signal to the pentode section of a pentode-triode tube, and rig that pentode for the highest voltage-gain it can manage.
Despite the tube types being different, both use a 4.7MΩ resistor to the screen, and a 1.5MΩ plate load.
- The large screen dropping resistor lowers screen voltage
a lot.
- The low screen voltage makes plate current very small.
- Very-small-plate-current means the tube is running near cut-off.
- The very-small-plate-current is passing through a very-large-value plate load resistor.
- The very-large-value plate load resistor means even a very-small variational-plate-current (AC) creates a large voltage-output.
- The small plate current also implies a small grid-bias voltage (especially when cathode-bias is used).
- Every tube distorts hard when the peak signal driving the tube exceeds the tube's bias.
- Small-grid-bias-voltage means the distortion noted above happens on the
positive-peak of the driving AC.
- Operating near cut-off means the tube also distorts rapidly on the
negative-peak of the driving AC.
- This Stinger circuit is rigged to deliver lots of odd-harmonic distortion (output clipped on both sides of the waveform).
The differences:
- The Hoffman-hosted schematic has:
- 6JW8 pentode.
- Cathode bias: 5.6kΩ cathode resistor bypassed by 25µF.
- Takes signal after the 1st gain stage.
- Has a simpler coupling-cap setup feeding the Stinger's "Vol" and "Color" (Tone) controls.
- Tubegeek's example has:
- 6AN8 pentode.
- Grid-leak bias: 0.005µF cap into 10MΩ grid-leak.
- Takes signal from Input jack before 1st gain stage.
- Has a voltage-divider (220kΩ into 150kΩ) w/ 1MΩ "Vol" control across lower leg.
- 0.01µF cap across upper leg of the divider to shave bass.
- Different-value "Color" (Tone) pot that changes the turnover point of this control.
- Use the triode side of the pentode-triode tube for additional voltage-gain.
- 6AN8 triode has a crazy-high 1.5MΩ plate load & 200kΩ cathode resistor.
- 6AN8 triode cathode resistor bypassed with 0.047µF: more super-high emphasis?
So how to tame?
... Garnet LB190D Pro amplifier with the "stinger" fuzz circuit.
...
It's too much as is…just way too noisy and such a big volume boost when engaged, it almost seems unusable.
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6AN8 pentode plate is direct-coupled to the
6AN8 triode grid. How about trying:
- Break that direct connection from pentode output (Pin 6) to triode input (Pin 2).
- Unsolder the 0.01µF from the 6AN8 triode plate (Pin 1).
- Use a jumper wire to solder the free-end of this 0.01µF coupling cap to the 6AN8 pentode plate (Pin 6).
- This should bypass the 6AN8 triode section, and avoid hiss imposed by the 6AN8 triode's 1.5MΩ plate load & 0.047µF cathode bypass cap.
Does the Stinger "Vol" control now have a better range towards the bottom of its sweep?