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  Weird Voltage Fluctuation in Fender Princeton

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Author Topic:   Weird Voltage Fluctuation in Fender Princeton
Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 04 May 2005 04:30 PM     profile     
Attempting to bias a 61/62 Princeton (6G2) I put an accurately measured 1 ohm resistor between the tied-together pins (1, 7 & 8) and ground (on the power tube sockets). I'm getting a voltage fluctuation from between .08 and .14. It takes about 3 seconds for it to go from .08 to .14 and back to .08 again.

Any ideas what component might be causing this?

Thanks.

[This message was edited by Alan Kirk on 04 May 2005 at 04:31 PM.]

Jay Fagerlie
Member

From: Lotus, California, USA

posted 04 May 2005 06:01 PM     profile     
Change out the power tubes and see if it stops.
Sounds like "electron shedding"

Jay

Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 04 May 2005 06:25 PM     profile     
Jay,

I tried different power tubes. Same thing.

Thanks for the suggestion.

--Alan Kirk

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Dave Mudgett
Member

From: Central Pennsylvania, USA

posted 04 May 2005 09:09 PM     profile     

Look at the 6G2 circuit (it's online here: http://www.ampwares.com/ffg/schematics.html). You can see that the tremelo circuit works by modulating the bias voltage, point Y on the diagram. Even if the intensity is all the way off, there might be a bit of bleed. Try switching the tremelo off using the footswitch, or simply put a shorted-out RCA plug into the footswitch jack - this shorts the oscillator circuit to ground.

This was the typical pre-Blackface method to get tremelo on Vibrolux/Tremolux and lower-end amps. Beginning with Blackface, it was changed except on the Princeton and Princeton Reverb, which kept this bias modulation approach. I prefer this type of tremelo, to me it has a 'smoother' sounding waveform. My favorite sounding tremelo was on a '61 White Tremolux which some yutz painted black years ago. But, man, was it a great sounding amp, yet another good one I wish I had back.

Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 04 May 2005 10:09 PM     profile     
Dave,

Thanks. I'll try check that out. Seems logical.

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John Daugherty
Member

From: Rolla, Missouri, USA

posted 05 May 2005 06:30 AM     profile     
Alan, the voltage will change when signal is applied to the tube. turn the gain controls to minimum and see if the voltage is steady. A noisy tube ahead of the output stage can cause this. Remove the tube just before the output stage to see if a signal is getting to the output tube grids.
Also touch that resistor to see if it is hot. It can generate thermal noise if it is hot. You may have to use a higher wattage resistor.

[This message was edited by John Daugherty on 05 May 2005 at 06:33 AM.]

Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 05 May 2005 06:44 AM     profile     
Dave,

I shorted the pedal input. No change. Voltage still fluctuates.

John,

I'll try your suggestions this evening (although I have been measuring it with the volume control full off). Thanks.

--Alan Kirk

[This message was edited by Alan Kirk on 05 May 2005 at 06:47 AM.]

Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 05 May 2005 03:43 PM     profile     
John,

The resistors are not hot.

I've removed the 7025, the 12AX7, and the power tubes, one by one, with no change in the oscillation. Is it okay to remove the 53YGT for diagnostic purposes?

Thanks.

--Alan Kirk

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Bill Crook
Member

From: Goodlettsville, TN , Spending my kid's inheritance

posted 06 May 2005 06:04 AM     profile     
A great big NO !!!!!

The 5Y3GT is the DC rectifier tube.
It changes AC to DC........ If you pull that tube ,NOTHING WORKS

------------------
http://home.comcast.net/~crookwf/
http://photobucket.com/albums/v479/billcrook/

John Daugherty
Member

From: Rolla, Missouri, USA

posted 06 May 2005 06:41 AM     profile     
Alan, I finally looked at the schematic. Pin 8 and 7 are connected to ground. Pin 1 is a blank pin. Pin 7 has to be grounded to connect the filament supply. If you are trying to bias the tube by adding a cathode resistor, you must first disconnect the wire connected between pin 8 and ground. Then connect the resistor from pin 8 to ground.
It looks like you are measuring the voltage drop across the wire from those pins to ground. Any resistor you connect to that point will not affect your measurement.
Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 06 May 2005 09:13 AM     profile     
You guys are great!

I'll dig into this thing again over the weekend.

Thanks.

------------------

Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 07 May 2005 12:30 PM     profile     
John,

Do you mean I need to disconnect Pin 8 from Pins 1 and 7 and give Pin 8 a separate path to ground, through the resistor?

[This message was edited by Alan Kirk on 07 May 2005 at 12:32 PM.]

John Daugherty
Member

From: Rolla, Missouri, USA

posted 08 May 2005 06:40 AM     profile     
Set me straight on exactly what you are trying to accomplish. Is this a modification where you wish to add a cathode resistor, or are you just trying to measure the bias voltage?
Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 08 May 2005 07:12 AM     profile     
John,

I want to put a 1 ohm resistor from cathode to ground so I can measure the cathode voltage through the resistor, for biasing, as per the "Cathode Resistor Method" of biasing described at http://www.duncanamps.com/technical/lvbias.html

Thanks for your response.

--Alan Kirk

[This message was edited by Alan Kirk on 08 May 2005 at 07:15 AM.]

Dave Mudgett
Member

From: Central Pennsylvania, USA

posted 08 May 2005 10:21 AM     profile     
Actually, Alan, the point here is to measure the cathode current, not the cathode voltage. By inserting the 1-ohm resistor, it doesn't significantly change the plate resistor, but X volts dropped across a precisely measured 1-ohm resistor indicates precisely X amperes of current. Usually we're talking milliamps of current, so you want to measure millivolts.

The questions are, 1) Do you have these 1-ohm resistors hooked up correctly? and 2) How many millivolts is this voltage oscillating? A typical 6V6 in a circuit like this draws around 20-25 ma per tube, depending on the applied bias voltage. If this oscillation is a small fraction of a millivolt, I wouldn't worry about it. Bias voltage and cathode current drift slightly due to many factors like line voltage variations, heating up of components, etc., even when the amp is run quiescently, no inputs, etc.

John Daugherty
Member

From: Rolla, Missouri, USA

posted 08 May 2005 01:29 PM     profile     
Yes,Alan, If you want to measure cathode current,break the wire connected to pin 8. Connect the one ohm resistor from pin 8 to ground.
You will probably not get the fluctuation after doing this. With a voltmeter across the 1 ohm resistor, volts=amps. 20ma will read .02 volts (20mv) on a voltmeter.
Alan Kirk
Member

From: Santa Barbara, CA, USA

posted 22 May 2005 08:40 PM     profile     
I provided Pins 7 and 8 with separate paths to ground. That ended the fluctuation and allowed me to get a rock steady reading over the 1 ohm resistor between Pin 8 and ground.

Thanks for all the help!

[This message was edited by Alan Kirk on 22 May 2005 at 08:42 PM.]

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