I'm restoring an old Japanese made Kingston amp that's been modified to add reverb, but in so doing it appears to have disabled the tremolo with which it was originally configured.
The amp has a pair of cathode biased 6AQ5 power tubes (sort of like 7-pin EL84s 6V6 in a smaller package) and three 12AX7's in the preamp. The original tone stack had Bass and Treble controls and the tremolo had Depth and Speed controls. A prior owner or tech added a tiny reverb transformer and reverb pan and dedicated the Treble pot to its circuit so the Bass pot became in effect a single Tone control. I have been unable to find an original schematic. I've created very poorly drawn hand drawn block schematics of various parts of the amp but haven't tied it all together yet.
The original Tremolo didn't work when I got the amp so I've been trying to figure out how to get it going but the problem is I'm having is I'm almost certain the original design used two triodes, one of which was robbed to power the Reverb driver.
I've studied the single half tube tremolo design but it's based on modulating fixed bias of power tubes and this amp is cathode biased. The only designs for cathode biased amps I'm finding require two triodes. I've tried several different routes of injecting the tremolo tube's plate output into either the grid or cathode of different preamp stages as well as the power tubes but nothing seems to get the oscillation going. Actually in a couple configurations I have been able to get it going such that I can see it on the scope with 1kHz injected but it's so weak I can barely hear it with a clean sine wave and not at all with a guitar signal.
I suppose it's possible, or probable even, that the tremolo's plate voltage is insufficient (only 75-125Vdc after it passes through the Intensity pot) or various resistance levels are incorrect but other than replacing leaky coupling capacitors I haven't played around with values yet.
I'd just like to know if what I'm trying to accomplish is even feasible before wasting any more time.