In the "bass channel" of this amp, there is a .02uf cap from one leg of the Treble Pot to ground. Does this shunt the higher frequencies to ground as the treble pot is increased? I would like to make this channel "better" for guitar, so I thought I might delete that from the amp when I build it.
I can follow the schematics, and build from them, but I do not understand what is happening to the signal at all parts. Are there some components I might want to leave off to maximize the bass channel for use with guitar?
Thank You
http://www.el34world.com/charts/Schematics/fender/BASSMAN_6G6A.pdf
you
need to leave those tone control parts in place. That .02uF capacitor, in combination with the 100k potentiometer are what forms the functioning treble control. With the treble control turned up all the way, the signal is taken with less highs removed. The resistance of the pot combined with that .02uf Cap (forming a R-C filter) will have a higher cut-off frequency than with less resistance between where the signal is taken and that cap. It's kind of late for me here, (well, "kind of" is an understatement,) and the formula to show where those cut-off frequencies are eludes me at the moment. I'll let someone else explain that part for now, while hoping what I have said isn't confusing. Needless to say, with that specific value of cap there, it will make that channel dark with the treble control turned down. You
may play around with that cap value though to change how dark it does get. (I would guess you'd probably not want to go any less than the .005uF found on the normal channel, and definately no more than what is there already (.02uF), but the exact value will depend on you and your ears.