• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Remove volume pot

Status
Not open for further replies.
Ok, so what would change if i use higher value grid leak resistors?

Going to try and see what 750k at the input will do instead of the 320 i put in.

Increasing the resistor at the grid moves the low frequency roll off due to that RC downward.
How much this matters depends on whether this RC is the dominant one in your system.
If there are other RC roll offs set at higher frequencies, you may not notice much.
 
Last edited:
Aha... Sorry for all the questions ;-)
Someone else here also said i should replace R23 and R35 for matched same value resistors to balance the phase inverter, but looking further at the schematic this seems wrong since R35 is tied to ground where R23 is not
 
The 470k grid leak sets the input impedance. It should be ok just to remove the volume pot, and depending you could remove the input cap too.

Not really. The 470k resistor ties the grid to GND. The capacitor blocks DC and low-frequency signals. Together, the resistor and the capacitor form a RC high pass filter, you shouldn't remove them. I'd just replace the volume pot with a resistor going from input to GND (47k or 100k or similar should work well).
 
famousmockingbird said:
So my original advice is ditch the input cap and 20k volume pot and just leave the 470k grid leak.......this should improve high frequencies response. I use 1M for most of my input grid leaks and have seen up to 5M.
Not sure how this would affect HF response.

'Normal' grid leaks are often 470k-1M. Much above 1M and you are getting into the territory of using grid current to provide grid bias.
 
Cant be that easy.....?!?

Yes, just make sure that the "transformer end" of each resistor goes to the SAME tube's plate.
You may need to adjust the bias current, so check it afterward.

Please be careful around high voltages, check with a meter to verify it is safe to work on first.

Tube amp circuits are relatively simple compared to most semiconductor amps.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.