... in my research, I came across a thread about Fender reverb oscillation where a member said the 12at7 as a reverb driver is a bad design choice due to unbalanced triodes and can induce oscillation because of how the grids and cathode are in parallel. ... The plates are the only section that can be in parallel. ...
Fender has been doing it for 62 years now. I wonder if they've topped 1 million amps built this way?
Point being, there is a massive number of amps out there with 12AT7 sections in parallel without any apparent issue.
https://ampgarage.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=36771
Bepone is who I'm referencing.
Ugghhh... Sometimes the loudest voices are not the ones you should listen to.
Instead, take Martin Manning's advice on that thread. Everything I've seen from him is spot-on. I notice he had a tip for wiring the 12AT7 exactly as Fender's layout showed (connect grids & cathodes directly over the top of the socket, but have a wider looping connection between plates that
lays on the chassis). See the photo at bottom; 12AT7 is the 3rd tube from the left.
... I recently added the reverb circuit back in. It now has a super high frequency oscillation that I can't exactly hear, but it makes my ears ring when it's on. ... It's also a good occasion to finally learn how to use my oscilloscope.
Use that scope to determine if/where the oscillation is happening. Make sure you have the amp Volume all the way off when you do this test, so you're not distracted by background noise.
You may also need to show some photos of how you added the reverb back into the amp-circuit. If you're having problems, it could be due to the implementation not-matching how Fender laid things out originally.
