I found the best version that I could find of the Fender Deluxe Reverb AA763 and then cleaned it up to make it more clear. Here is the link:
http://www.filedropper.com/deluxereverbaa763
I compared the AA to the AB, a few differences, but not much; 1.5K resistors were added to the grid on each of the 6V6GT tubes, which is a nice safety feature.
The two Tone capacitors (normal and vibrato) increased from .033 uf to .047 uf.
The Reverb resistor increased from 4.7M to 3.3M.
The Phase Inverter resistors changed from 27K and 100K to 22K and 82K.
The Tremolo resistor increased from 56K to 100K; and notice the schematic is also slightly changed around the 12AX7 connections--what would this change do?
In comparing the AB to a 1977 Deluxe Reverb I noticed most changes were with the addition of a ground cord and the Stand-By switch moved so it's now between the caps and the transformer.
http://www.filedropper.com/deluxereverbaa763
I compared the AA to the AB, a few differences, but not much; 1.5K resistors were added to the grid on each of the 6V6GT tubes, which is a nice safety feature.
The two Tone capacitors (normal and vibrato) increased from .033 uf to .047 uf.
The Reverb resistor increased from 4.7M to 3.3M.
The Phase Inverter resistors changed from 27K and 100K to 22K and 82K.
The Tremolo resistor increased from 56K to 100K; and notice the schematic is also slightly changed around the 12AX7 connections--what would this change do?
In comparing the AB to a 1977 Deluxe Reverb I noticed most changes were with the addition of a ground cord and the Stand-By switch moved so it's now between the caps and the transformer.
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I think the only difference on the tremolo wiring is where the grid of the amplifier portion (the right-side of the 12AX7) gets tapped. In the aa763, it appears to be tied directly to the grid of the oscillator whereas in the other it's tapping off one of the CR filters, so I think it's just going to be a 60 degree phase difference between the AA763 and AB763, which I don't think would have any effect on the function.
But I'm a noob and I could be completely wrong.
But I'm a noob and I could be completely wrong.
PI input/output is too small/too much NFB
You need to be thinking more Super DR xD
What is a Super DR xD?
I found the best version that I could find of the Fender Deluxe Reverb AA763 and then cleaned it up to make it more clear. Here is the link:
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I compared the AA to the AB, a few differences, but not much; 1.5K resistors were added to the grid on each of the 6V6GT tubes, which is a nice safety feature.
The two Tone capacitors (normal and vibrato) increased from .033 uf to .047 uf.
The Reverb resistor increased from 4.7M to 3.3M.
The Phase Inverter resistors changed from 27K and 100K to 22K and 82K.
The Tremolo resistor increased from 56K to 100K; and notice the schematic is also slightly changed around the 12AX7 connections--what would this change do?
In comparing the AB to a 1977 Deluxe Reverb I noticed most changes were with the addition of a ground cord and the Stand-By switch moved so it's now between the caps and the transformer.
I don't know why the link doesn't work.
What do I need to do differently?
Thanks.
Here, AA763
http://bmamps.com/Schematics/fender/deluxe_reverb_aa763_schem.pdf
AB763
http://bmamps.com/Schematics/fender/deluxe_reverb_ab763_schem.pdf
The three caps in the phase shift oscillator are the heart of the oscillation. They are a loop, so it really doesn't matter where they take the signal off to be amplified by the second triode.
http://bmamps.com/Schematics/fender/deluxe_reverb_aa763_schem.pdf
AB763
http://bmamps.com/Schematics/fender/deluxe_reverb_ab763_schem.pdf
The three caps in the phase shift oscillator are the heart of the oscillation. They are a loop, so it really doesn't matter where they take the signal off to be amplified by the second triode.
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