Hey thanks for the info everyone ,
In regards to the mods- I like the sound of this amp and don't want to change it away from what it is, I would rather maintain the VOX sound , just slightly tweak it to be the best it can be.
This is my Kitchen amp , its the mini version so I also use it as a head connected to a 10 inch cab for recording.
The caps have been discharged using a resistor and checked with a meter. - you have to take the board out completely to discharge the caps.
ChopSauce wrote: ↑Sun Feb 26, 2023 7:18 pm
I had a look at a schematic for this amp and there seem to be several things that didn't make much sense to me, including the points you reported.
That C6 seems pretty weird, notably and I wouldn't be troubled that my amp hasn't it.
If I were you, I think I'd go one mod at a time, starting with C4, as noted.
For C15, I'm not even sure there's something needed there, but I think usual values are closer to 47pF. Maybe you can start testing just C15 clipped?
I don't think 22nF for C5 is a good choice, also. It may make your amp sound muddy. By the way, C18 = 100nF seems to much, in contrast.
I'd rather increase C16 to something closer to a more common value, as is 22uF.
NB (as I seem to see isolated gloves) how about any discharging resistor?
ChopSauce - C15 was chosen due to this information found here -
https://www.diyaudio.com/community/thre ... ct.314517/
" I used a frequency generator playing test tones through the amp as I alternated different capacitance values for this circuit - C15 was decreased from 470pf to 220pf; this is because the capacitor was actually draining all frequencies from about 1000-1500 and above. Now C15 only starts to drain frequencies above 2-3KHz. This has the efffect of "opening up" the voicing of the amp"
ChopSauce - I don't think 22nF for C5 is a good choice, also. It may make your amp sound muddy. By the way, C18 = 100nF seems to much, in contrast"
22nf was recommended by an amp tech who had worked on a few of these amps for customers.
"Cap C5 is unusually small, at 4.7nF. Upping it to 22nF opens up the low end nicely, without spoiling the trademark Vox chime. C5 is just to the right of the volume control, and a 400 volt Sozo mustard cap fits nicely, stood on end. Parts cost is only a couple of buck" -
https://www.thegearpage.net/board/index ... 524/page-2
ChopSauce wrote: ↑Sun Feb 26, 2023 9:29 pm
Of course, we both know that we would rather gut it and build something else, whatever that is - even though an EL84 powered circuit would possibly be prefered - but that is not the typical "first tube amp mod" thing ...
Anyway, I was just passing to post the schematic I found for the amp. Is it the attached one which you (stonerose) refer to?
Vox_AC4TVH.jpg
ChopSauce - yes that's the one , its better than the one I found but also differs as it has C6 at the volume pot as mentioned before , is there a better resolution version? I cant see what voltage the Red LED resistor, which I assume is R6 would be getting ? I'm going to swap with a purple LED so might need to change R6 which is currently 560 ohm
I have attached a pic of the back of the board ( I have removed some components)
"A" is where C6 = 22nf is installed on some board versions at the volume pot, but NOT on mine
and "B" is where I have the unnamed 22nf cap
Have they just moved C6 for some reason ?
I have also noticed that C2 in the diagram you provided is also missing on my board , but this seams to be common across the 2 apparent board versions
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