I'm sorry to have been in the way here. Got the message. So indeed now back to Franken102.talbany wrote:OK.. Coolgot that out of the way

A nice weekend to all here!
Max
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
I'm sorry to have been in the way here. Got the message. So indeed now back to Franken102.talbany wrote:OK.. Coolgot that out of the way
The meatball surgery approach (cut it in half and see which side it's on) seems like a good approach. But I thought I read that mismatched power tubes would sometimes cause some increase in second order harmonics and clipping.talbany wrote:OK.. Coolgot that out of the way back to the amp..
Things that has little to do with the sustainability
Filter Caps
Tubes
Speakers
LNFB V1
Snubbers
PI Trimmer settings
Direction of coupling caps were not tested on this one
Sustains/feedsback without PAB in OD
Does it on both clean (PAB) and OD
OD channel sustains/feeds back with either single coils or Humbuckers
Amp does not need a D-lator to sustain bloom feedback
Amp does not need to be played at loud volumes
Does not need Formica circuit boards..
Amp uses standard ODS voltages
Amp does not need FET to Sustain/Bloom
Amp does not need 100uf on the plates
The wire used in the Preamp is cloth covered wire so so much for needing Teflon for good tone![]()
BTW.. one of the OPT secondary wires were even spliced..Could that be it.
Dumble design leans more tword a balanced output section and minimal THD!!The meatball surgery approach (cut it in half and see which side it's on) seems like a good approach. But I thought I read that mismatched power tubes would sometimes cause some increase in second order harmonics and clipping.
Merely poking fun at the purists..I do like the cloth wire!! What's the current consensus on teflon wire? It seems like all the mojo is in cloth covered and possibly pvc covered. Heck, even vintage throwback guitars have cloth wire under the pickguard...
on the list you say LNFB V1 has little to do with it. Do you state that because you left it out on this build?talbany wrote: Things that has little to do with the sustainability
Filter Caps
Tubes
Speakers
LNFB V1
Snubbers
PI Trimmer settings
Direction of coupling caps were not tested on this one
Sustains/feedsback without PAB in OD
Does it on both clean (PAB) and OD
OD channel sustains/feeds back with either single coils or Humbuckers
Amp does not need a D-lator to sustain bloom feedback
Amp does not need to be played at loud volumes
Does not need Formica circuit boards..
Amp uses standard ODS voltages
Amp does not need FET to Sustain/Bloom
Amp does not need 100uf on the plates
The wire used in the Preamp is cloth covered wire so so much for needing Teflon for good tone![]()
BTW.. one of the OPT secondary wires were even spliced..Could that be it.![]()
And now from a famous note flipping thread http://ampgarage.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=144905 :talbany wrote: Personally I like the LNFB when in OD but don't care for it at all in clean so I opt out.. I also do not care for the snubbers if I don't have to go there..
ericlee wrote:Give this man a cigar! no two cigars!!vibratoking wrote:This can happen if the circuit is setup so that the magnitude of the electrical feedback in the circuit is unity or more and 180 degrees out of phase for some frequency. This is the concept of phase margin. Sounds like the second harmonic in this case. I believe this is BobW's thought about feedback control theory.How can something bloom or feedback without speakers?![]()
Dr.Ika (pickmaster or Eric Lee) is here and I'd like to defuse some skepticism about upper mentioned sound samples.
As I've mentioned before (and nobody noticed) this "bloom'n flip" phenomenon is a combination of several factors: amp, guitar, speaker etc.
First of all, clips were recorded direct to the PC from the amp's effects send out !!! not surprising that tone is harsh, but in this experiment tone was not a concern, "bloom'n flip" was.
Before I continue let's do other experiment - get a guitar with a neck pickup very closer to the strings (in my case PAF humbacker. Well spoted dear vibratoking). Plug it to the nice compressor.To avoid acoustic feedback listen via the headphones. Turn compressor's GAIN up and ATTACK down. Play sustaining notes on all fingerboard. Some notes on some frets will "Bloom'n flip" much more then others, especially when note fades out. Obviously different guitars will have blooming notes on different frets.
Compressor is an AVC device and it amplifies weak 2nd harmonic on the end of the note. If you do this with a speaker you also can get acoustic feedback and infinite sustain.
Now about amp. Just for experiment sake I've removed V1 NFB and lowered V1's 150k slope resistor down to 57k which added compression and lower mids. From input to the V1 and almost all internal shielded cables were changed to RG 174 28pf/ft coax. Tweaked a tone stack for my taste/touch and tweaked PI tube. That's it, no rocket science.
This effect is much more evident without speaker but it is much more complex end pleasant with nice speaker at the gig volumes where you have guitar, amp, speaker etc, interaction.
Now, Tag's "fast note phase flip" is a different phenomenon. It is evident from his clips that Tag has a strong pick or finger attack. If amp's PI tube is not ideally symmetrical you will have amplitude dependent frequency phase shifting on each note, faster on high and slower on lower notes.
So, Tag open your amp and tweak the PI trimmer, you might enhance the "flipping" effect.![]()
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Cheers
Tony, IMO you took a lot of trouble to draw up and post the layouts of the 2nd and 3rd generation amps and the layout of the "classic" version of #124. And AFAIR one of your intentions for this has been, to stop the sloppy and confusing talk here about e.g. the "seventies classic amps" by making clear all the differences between a typicial 2nd and 3rd generation amp from the seventies and a "classic" amp from the early eighties.talbany wrote:Max
Sorry you took that the wrong way.. I thought everyone has said there Peace concerning the clone issue!!If you like to continue the discussion please by all means..BTW..What is it exactly that bothers you about using this term to describe a copy..
And in my opinion a label like "102" should be precise and definite, otherwise it's IMO not functional as a tool of communication, as it might lead to misunderstandings just like this nonsense talk about "70ies classic amps", that you did end with your layouts of a 2nd and 3rd generation amp and of the "classic" version of #124.wokkel wrote:On a side note, on the layout of 102 I see two snubbers on V2. But it seems you don't have them on this amp.
I'm I wrong?
MaxMax wrote:Tony, IMO you took a lot of trouble to draw up and post the layouts of the 2nd and 3rd generation amps and the layout of the "classic" version of #124. And AFAIR one of your intentions for this has been, to stop the sloppy and confusing talk here about e.g. the "seventies classic amps" by making clear all the differences between a typicial 2nd and 3rd generation amp from the seventies and a "classic" amp from the early eighties.talbany wrote:Max
Sorry you took that the wrong way.. I thought everyone has said there Peace concerning the clone issue!!If you like to continue the discussion please by all means..BTW..What is it exactly that bothers you about using this term to describe a copy..
Now in my opinion the same kind of sloppy talk starts again, when we label amps with e.g. no snubbers and a rather different power supply etc. etc., like your amp that's the topic of this thread "102".
And what - IMO: consequently - happens?: New memebers here indeed seem to be confused - at least to some extent - and seem to wonder about all the differences between your amp that's the topic here and your layout of #102:And in my opinion a label like "102" should be precise and definite, otherwise it's IMO not functional as a tool of communication, as it might lead to misunderstandings just like this nonsense talk about "70ies classic amps", that you did end with your layouts of a 2nd and 3rd generation amp and of the "classic" version of #124.wokkel wrote:On a side note, on the layout of 102 I see two snubbers on V2. But it seems you don't have them on this amp.
I'm I wrong?
And considering all the labour when drawing up these layouts, I think it's a pity that now all this kind of sloppy talk sarts again - just on a new level.
That's what bothers me.
All the best,
Max
Tony, what I've difficulties to understand is this:talbany wrote:... here is my 102 then points out any changes or modifications posts pictures...
MaxMax wrote:Tony, what I've difficulties to understand is this:talbany wrote:... here is my 102 then points out any changes or modifications posts pictures...
When considering all these "changes or modifications":
For what technical reasons precisely do or did you think, that it's more appropriate to label your "Feedback City" amp "#102" than to label it "#124"?
I ask, because looking at the layouts of the skyline version of #124 and of RF's #102, I think to see more or less the same amount of differences between your "Feedback City" amp and #102, as the amount of differences between your "Feedback City" amp and the skyline version of #124. Or is this wrong?
And when comparing the layouts of the skyline version of #124 and of RF's #102, it's at least not completely obvious for me, if #124 isn't perhaps even less different from #102 than your "Feedback City" amp?
Thanks for your patience and have a nice weekend,
Max
Exactly!!.. I think its safe to say that one of the defining qualitys within 102 is it's ability to sustain bloom and feedback easily..Judging by the clip my variation does the same with several modifications and still the bloom feedback exists..So its safe to say that if this is a quality you like and want in your 102 variation the changes I have made will not effect the amps ability to bloom feedback etc, like the original 102..This is my whole pointstevlech wrote:Perhaps the question to be asked is "what makes a #102 build a #102?"
Is it the presence cap? The filter caps? The pot sizes/tapers? What's unique to #102 and does Tony's amp retain those differences?
Just poking my nose in where it doesn't belong...
Good day to all.
EDIT- FWIW, a build w/o LNFB and small snubbers (maybe none) sounds more like #183 to me. But what do I know????
http://ampgarage.com/forum/viewtopic.ph ... 73&start=0lovetone wrote:Hi Tony did you post the layout for this amp on the other discussion?
i cant find it although i thought i had seen it.
Thanks Geoff