... the wet signal is a lot less than I would want.
Can someone help ID the resistor that would serve as the mixing resistor in this amp?
I see R13/R14 form a divider ...
If you turn the Reverb pot full-up, do you still not get enough reverb? I ask because Fender's circuit typically gives way more reverb than most players want/use, and we don't want to stumble into making a circuit where the Reverb control is barely turned on just for the sake of having "
Wow!" reverb at low settings.
In a perfect world, you would have a spare reverb tank to swap in to this amp to verify this isn't an issue with the tank itself. (
EDIT: It seems you already tried this, but it was posted
in a different thread...)
R44 (150kΩ) and R31 (1MΩ) form a divider reducing the signal level going into the Reverb Driver tube (V3a). You might consider replacing R44 with a piece of wire to increase the drive to the tank (if desired).
R13 (470kΩ), R14 (1MΩ) and R15 (2MΩ Reverb pot) form a divider that mixes the Dry and Reverb signals. This can't be directly compared to a
Deluxe Reverb, but the Deluxe would have R13 closer to 2-3MΩ, and R14 closer to 470kΩ.
Were I in your shoes, I would think about measuring the AC Volts to the Driver tube grid, to the tank input, and at different points along the divider/mixer of a typical Fender amp with reverb. Those can be compared to similar measurements in your amp to determine whether there's a tank issue, circuit issue, or simply a need to adjust the original circuit to get the response you prefer.