Ok. I took a break on this project for a while and decided it was a great time to learn to use an oscilloscope and confirm I didn't have a problem before I start making any changes. So, now that I have a scope and I'm getting the hang of using it, I can confirm there's nothing funky with the signal path like blocking distortion or other unwanted noises or spikes. The voltages are correct, part values are correct, no cold soldier - essentially the amp is working as designed. It appears that this is a personal problem; I just don't like the way it sounds.
A few things I learned about it with the scope,
1. The preamp has a ton of gain even in the early stages (too much) and starts to distort the waveform with the pre-amp around 5.
2. The mid control has a HUGE impact on the amplitude of the signal. It really cuts out a lot of the signal vs shaping the tone.
3. The fat switch seems to add a huge amount of volume (amplitude boost) but just pushes the distortion into icky/nasty territory instead of smooth, harmonic, ear pleasing gain.
3. The jumpered 2nd and 3rd triodes create a huge signal boost going into the phase inverter that makes the signal MUCH louder and results in fairly harsh distortion down the line. I guess it does push the EL-84s to break up sooner. That part might be helpful.
What's driving me nuts -
The clean sound is OK but starts to break up super early. Decent with a stock Strat, old PAFs, but can't deal with hot pickups.
The amp only has decent sustain ONLY if you lower the preamp volume and crank the power amp into clipping. That seems to negate the value of the three prior gain stages.
The preamp distortion is harsh, lacks sustain, and I can’t get a pleasing harmonic quality.
There is no "warm" anything. No crunchy distortion, no clearly defined lead tones, nothing that sounds remotely like a Santana like "singy" lead tone.
I’m wondering if I should just start over and rethink the entire pre-amp section. Here’s what I’m thinking – please tell me if this is crazy.
- Change the first grid stop resistor to 64k to cut off some of the initial highs.
- lower the bypass cap values on the first two stages. (maybe 4K to 25K range)
- Remove the jumpers between the V2a and V2b triodes. I think the extra gain is overkill and sucking tone.
- And MAYBE, use the extra V2a triode to add a cold clipper between the tone stack and the final gain stage (V2b) to get a smoother sounding overdrive without all the distortion. (I’d love some thoughts on this one. Would it work? I’d have to squeeze the parts in off the board, so it might look a little point-to-point and risk triggering my OCD. LOL)
- I’ve also read up on the LTP “Smoothing Cap” concept. That might be a good add too. But more of a final addition after I fix the rest.
For reference -
https://el34world.com/Hoffman/files/Hoffman_BluesJunior.pdfThanks for the help!