The importance of guitar amp input circuits
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The importance of guitar amp input circuits
I'd like to start a discussion dedicated to exploring different techniques in designing input circuits for guitar amps.
Perhaps a tutorial covering the importance of radio frequency suppression, signal to noise, microphonics, shielding, miller capacitance(and how it relates to series resistance, cable/shielding capacitance), etc.
Different amp designers sometimes use different methods of designing input circuits. Some might find it helpful to see an explanation as to how these circuits work, some equivalent circuits, and how to make calculations for their own designs.
Any interest?
Perhaps a tutorial covering the importance of radio frequency suppression, signal to noise, microphonics, shielding, miller capacitance(and how it relates to series resistance, cable/shielding capacitance), etc.
Different amp designers sometimes use different methods of designing input circuits. Some might find it helpful to see an explanation as to how these circuits work, some equivalent circuits, and how to make calculations for their own designs.
Any interest?
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
I think it would be and interesting discussion. I would like to know how to change the input impedance of a tube amp to match with a piezo to not use a preamp. It seem to work fairly well, but knowing more about changing would be interesting and useful. Thanks
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
Hi, this forum already contains all those infos.
Use the search function.
Use the search function.
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
I for one for one find the search function here absolutely worthless. i have never found anything here with it. i have had to search all the threads one by one.
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
Try a 10m pot on input jack to vary from 150k for humbuckers to 10m for pedal steel guitars and piezo.pops wrote:I think it would be and interesting discussion. I would like to know how to change the input impedance of a tube amp to match with a piezo to not use a preamp. It seem to work fairly well, but knowing more about changing would be interesting and useful. Thanks
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
I don't agree. It's like saying the cars are useless just because I don't have the driver license.tsutt wrote:I for one for one find the search function here absolutely worthless. i have never found anything here with it. i have had to search all the threads one by one.
You have to learn how to search. I've just tried "how to piezo" restricted in the technical discussions, and I've found all the info.
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
Roberto, I did use the search function. Im not sure reading through 15 pages listing non specific threads to see if 20 of them contain bits of info is very efficient or practical.
Pops, that wasn't the direction i was thinking of going with this when i first posted. But that is a great question and there are some interesting answers. Lets expand this to deal with exploring the entire first stage. To your point, i learned a few circuits with higher input impedences I learned reading Blencowe. I'll share and explain those with his permission. Peizio pickups are the worst when heavily loaded, it sound someone throwing rocks at a banjo.
Pops, that wasn't the direction i was thinking of going with this when i first posted. But that is a great question and there are some interesting answers. Lets expand this to deal with exploring the entire first stage. To your point, i learned a few circuits with higher input impedences I learned reading Blencowe. I'll share and explain those with his permission. Peizio pickups are the worst when heavily loaded, it sound someone throwing rocks at a banjo.
Last edited by SoulFetish on Sat Jan 31, 2015 4:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
http://www.aikenamps.com/index.php/white-papersSoulFetish wrote:I'd like to start a discussion dedicated to exploring different techniques in designing input circuits for guitar amps.
Perhaps a tutorial covering the importance of radio frequency suppression, signal to noise, microphonics, shielding, miller capacitance(and how it relates to series resistance, cable/shielding capacitance), etc.
Different amp designers sometimes use different methods of designing input circuits. Some might find it helpful to see an explanation as to how these circuits work, some equivalent circuits, and how to make calculations for their own designs.
Any interest?
TM
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
Aiken's tech pages are must-have bookmark for anyone interested in tube amps. I recommend reading everything there, then reading them again several more times.
His paper on Miller capacitance is particularly helpful In this area (as well as the paper on gridstoppers and resistor noise). Anyone curious about why the resistor value of 68k is seen at the input of many classic amps should start here.
Personally, i love old classic amps but think 68k is way too large a resistor value. There are many other ways of achieving a -3db cutoff frequency of around 20kHz without large series resistances.
His paper on Miller capacitance is particularly helpful In this area (as well as the paper on gridstoppers and resistor noise). Anyone curious about why the resistor value of 68k is seen at the input of many classic amps should start here.
Personally, i love old classic amps but think 68k is way too large a resistor value. There are many other ways of achieving a -3db cutoff frequency of around 20kHz without large series resistances.
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
This would also be a good place to start:
http://ampgarage.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9023
All of the criteria the OP listed are a part of the basic design of a tube stage—learn those things and then you know how to tweak it or "design" for your specific needs and goals.
http://ampgarage.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9023
All of the criteria the OP listed are a part of the basic design of a tube stage—learn those things and then you know how to tweak it or "design" for your specific needs and goals.
What?
- johnnyreece
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
I rarely use sites' built in search functions anymore. I prefer to go to Google and search using the terms I'm looking for, followed by site:ampgarage.com.
Edit: Sorry for the derail...
Edit: Sorry for the derail...
Last edited by johnnyreece on Sat Jan 31, 2015 5:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
Im bailing on this thread i think. Its going off the rails. There's a reason i didn't just post a link to download the 4th edition of Radiotron Designers Handbrook and say "If you wanna know anything about the input of Guitah amps, dude, read this. It's in there"
Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
You can hear your guitar at 20kHz?SoulFetish wrote: Personally, i love old classic amps but think 68k is way too large a resistor value. There are many other ways of achieving a -3db cutoff frequency of around 20kHz without large series resistances.
TM
- Leo_Gnardo
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
Before you go off the rails, try 1: Google search, don't use the site's search, some find Google works better. Type Amp Garage into your search if you want answers specfically on this site. and B: there's a terrific sticky right at the top of this stack "preamp gain stages, how they sound and why." Lots of good answers right there: no need to reinvent the wheel. Read. Research. Solder & listen. If there's something you still don't get after that, just ask.SoulFetish wrote:Im bailing on this thread i think. Its going off the rails. There's a reason i didn't just post a link to download the 4th edition of Radiotron Designers Handbrook and say "If you wanna know anything about the input of Guitah amps, dude, read this. It's in there"
down technical blind alleys . . .
- martin manning
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Re: The importance of guitar amp input circuits
People have pointed to information which describes the theory and practice of common cathode gain stages as used in guitar amps. This is very specific information that addresses the original question, not the whole of RDH4. I'll add that Merlin Blencowe's web pages are another good source. Chapter one of his book is download-able free, and it covers all of this in much better style than anyone here is willing or even capable of reiterating.SoulFetish wrote:Im bailing on this thread i think. Its going off the rails. There's a reason i didn't just post a link to download the 4th edition of Radiotron Designers Handbrook and say "If you wanna know anything about the input of Guitah amps, dude, read this. It's in there"