I'm converting an old Stromberg Carlson PA for guitar use. ...
I'm ignoring the phono input for now.
...
There is ... not enough clean tone.
IMO, you're starting in the wrong spot. Begin with the "Phono" input only.
Notice the topology from the Phono input:
1. Input
2. Volume control (to turn down an over-hot phono preamp or cartridge)
3. Gain Stage (Mu of 20)
4. Paraphase Inverter - 6SC7
5. Power Tubes
Now look at the topology of a
5C5 Pro:
1. Input
2. Gain Stage (Mu of 40 or 70)
3. Volume control (to turn down an over-hot pickup multiplied by the Gain Stage)
4. Paraphase Inverter - 6SC7
5. Power Tubes
The Phono side is like a 5C5 Pro, but with the Volume control in the wrong place. V2 to the Speaker is like a 5C5 Pro with its Volume control full-up; The Phono Volume control is behaving like your guitar's Volume control. Do you ever play your amps with the Volume full-up, and use only your guitar's Volume control as the sole level/clean/dirt control mechanism?
To that we add another Mu of 100 Gain Stage in V1. Yeah, I bet you're feeling like "there's no clean tone" since this amp is like the world's first "
high-gain modified tweed amp.". I would look to getting the Phono input settled as this amp's basic voice before trying to sort out what to do with the extra gain of the Mic input's stage.
... There is too much bass and ...
...
3. Increase the NFB by reducing the NFB resistor. It is now 1 meg!
...
Negative voltage feedback usually uses a voltage divider to sample a signal, and that divider is made of at least 2 components. Here, R2 (1MΩ) is one component and comes from the 15Ω tap via C6 (0.003µF). But V3's grid reference resistor R14 (also 1MΩ) is a path to AC Ground, in parallel with V2's plate load R9 (100kΩ). This parallel pair is "the other resistor" of this voltage divider,
represented as Z2 here.
Working through everything, the feedback appears to apply 1.77v Peak to driver stage V3 Pin 3, while the Voltage Chart notes the bias (Pin 6) of the driver-inverter is 1.1v. Does it really need "more negative feedback" when the existing amount reduces power section sensitivity by more than half?
Negative Feedback basically turns the driver/phase-inverter/power-tubes/output-transformer into an Opamp. The
gain of an opamp with feedback is basically "Z2"/"Z1" using the terminology from the link above.
The "gain" we should shoot for depends a lot on how much voltage we need at the speaker, vs how much the input to the power section receives.
The
5F4 Super has a feedback loop configured for 4Ω and a gain of 56kΩ/1.5kΩ = 37.3. It takes 7.75v RMS to have 15w across 4Ω. 7.75v RMS / 37.3 = 0.208v RMS to get 15w RMS output.
The AU-42 has a feedback loop configured for 15Ω and a gain of 1MΩ/90.9kΩ = 11. It takes 15v RMS to have 15w across 15Ω. 15v RMS / 11 = 1.36v RMS to get 15w RMS output.
Do we
really need "more feedback" in this output section, which will make it even harder to drive?
The Treble tone control is basically what we would otherwise call "Presence" since it reduces the high frequency content of the feedback. Because of where the feedback is injected, it also directly acts on removing high frequency content of the signal before that signal gets to the speaker & becomes part of the feedback loop.
C6 (0.003µF) working against 1MΩ should be -3dB at about 50Hz. But I wonder about an old cap or a leaky cap's impact on the frequency range of the feedback (I saw "bad caps were replaced" but don't know whether this one got caught).
To know what we're working with, I would disconnect the feedback loop & the Treble control by unsoldering C3 (0.01µF) and R2 (1MΩ) from C4 (0.05µF), R14 (1MΩ) and V3 Pin 3.
If C6 was a very small effective value, there is no feedback for low frequency, and a lot of feedback at high frequency.
If R2 was a very small effective value, there is no feedback for low frequency, and a lot of feedback at high frequency.
V3 Pin 3 should be "0v" but the 1MΩ there & chance of grid current means C6 was likely meant for voltage-blocking to keep DC off the speaker voice-coil.