Hello all,
I built my first amp, Dave Hunter's Two-Stroke, about 10 years ago using a 5f2a chassis and the "traditional" Fender layout. Inspired by the simplicity of my MagnaTone Varsity Deluxe 108 and its point-to-point wiring, I decided to recreate the Two-Stroke using P2P wiring. The Two-Stroke is an SE amp based on the 5f2a circuit, with only two resistors different - 1k voltage dropping after the first filter cap, and 68k instead of 22k for negative feedback - and it adds a cathode voicing switch for the preamp. Otherwise it's a Tweed Princeton.
I successfully cloned the Varsity Deluxe and made a Tweed Princeton using P2P, so I decided I would convert the Tweed Princeton into a Two-Stroke so I could use an EL34, which I prefer. I swapped out the OT for a larger Heyboer, changed the resistors, added the 3 way switch. I fired up the amp using sacrificial tubes - JJ 5Y3, TungSol 5881 and 12AX7 - in case of phase mismatch between the OT and NFB. All was good. So, much to my surprise, when I swapped the 5881 for an EL34 I heard, instead of the sweet hum of a poorly grounded amp :) , a synthesizer-like sounding bwoo-eeeeep! (or Bweee-ooo) after about 18 seconds. This didn't at all sound like what I've heard with a 6v6 with an OT-NFB mismatch, but rather a synthesizer sweeping from high to low frequencies.
So I compared this P2P amp with my other Two-Stroke, the one using the Princeton chassis and Fender layout. The readings were nearly identical. And, that amp happily functions using an EL34. I used a different EL34 and disconnected the NFB - same result.
Why would the amp work perfectly fine using a 5881 and 6L6 but not an EL34, when the other layout functions with either? The components are identical so I am stumped. I power off the amp when I hear that hideous sound to avoid blowing a tube so I haven't attempted any measurements with the EL34. Anything else I should be looking at?
Measurements I took:
5f2a P2p
AC supply 351 347
B+ 390 396
B+2 (screen) 350 350
Plate 384 382
Bias 56mA 51mA
V1A plate 154 156
V1B plate 154 156
Thanks for any advice you can offer.