Hello fellow amp junkies!
So I have been resto-modding a ‘68 AB763 Super Reverb (don’t panic - it was player-grade when I bought it - had so much work done very little original was left except for the iron) and I am getting a fizzly/sizzly decay/sustain that sort of rides/trails my guitar signal. It’s literally about to put me in a straight jacket, haha…
I have modeled the circuit after the Custom Shop ‘64 Diaz Reissue Vibroverb: increased power filtering, cutting low-end in the preamp w/cathode bypass mods, disconnected normal channel and tremolo. I am going for that SRV “Lenny” from El Mocambo type of tone. The amp sounds KILLER and exactly like I want it to except for I am getting that fizz. Playing the amp pretty loud - dialing it right about to edge of breakup, about 6 or 7.
I have tried EVERYTHING. Rolled tubes, replaced out of spec components, PI plate “fizz” cap, lower power tube grid leaks, larger power tube grid stoppers, biasing the PI cooler, biasing the power tubes warmer (have gone as high as my bias pot will allow - damn near 100%, tube-cooking territory - still the same), shielded wires to V2 grid/volume pot, checked and cleaned up lead dress…I mean I have tried every single gosh-dang thing I can think of and I haven’t been able to get rid of it.
I did have an anomaly/oscillation in V4 which I found and fixed…and on a scope I do get a smidge of crossover distortion once the thing is really cooking - 7+ on volume - (which I assume will always be there to an extent in black-panel/AB763 Fenders). Also I literally just got my scope/signal generator rig so I’m still learning how to use it all.
I have tried the amp into a 2x12 EV cab - fizz still there. Have played my ‘67 Bandmaster into the Super cab 4x10 w/ JBL E110s - no fizz so not the cab/speakers. It’s a dang Super Reverb - not like it’s a Super Lead/gain monster.
So short of trying a new/bigger OT I am at wits end. I have found nothing on the web as far as solutions…threads usually end up with a bunch of suggestions (most of which I feel like I’ve already tried) and OP never posts whether or not they fixed it.
I really have no other thought other than maybe “that’s just the way certain amps sound (particularly Fenders) when they are cranked up”. But the perfectionist in me refuses to accept that. I mean, you didn’t hear any of that from Live at the El Mo. And those amps weren’t quiet or 100% clean.
If anyone has any other bright ideas I’d pay good money to hear them…I’m desperate, lol. Appreciate y’all!