MusicManJP6 said:
lockbody said:
Try a AT7 in the PI spot (V6) for some more headroom, too.
For MORE headroom? I tried this and my clean channel had no headroom at all. I thought a lower gain tube in this slot made the amp breakup earlier therefore decreasing headroom. Correct me if i am wrong, but that is what I have read and experienced.
PI stuff ('cause I didn't know any of this):
When you push your amp hard it is not as much the output tubes distorting as it is the phase inverter breaking down and distorting. We are talking output stage distortion here. We are not talking about how you may have messed up the signal with preamp tube distortion and compression already. The phase inverter may be the hardest worked tube in most amps. I cannot begin to count the times when I have found phase inverters that were long past their service life. When you change your output tubes change that phase inverter. At the least change it every other output tube change.
Many folks think that when they want to have their amp have more clean headroom they can insert a 12AT7 in place of the 12AX7. Very true. (By the way, the 12AT7 in a first gain stage is an awful tone generator in a guitar amp. If you want to drop front end gain use a 5751 (gain of 60-70) or a 12AY7 (gain of 40). The 12AY7 was the first gain stage in the classic Fender Tweed Bassman, Deluxe, etc.
Going from a 12AX7 to a 12AT7 in the PI (phase inverter) will yield a change in output tube distortion, touch, and output dynamics in most amps. Is this because the gain is lower in the 12AT7? 10% yes perhaps. The lower gain is a factor but the larger factors are:
• We have almost 10 times the current available to drive the output tubes before the phase inverter starts to break down.
• We have a transconductance of 5500 vs 1600 of the 12AX7. Keeping this simple, it means it takes a lot less input signal for a given output signal.
and
Q. What does the Phase Inverter do and what will swapping a 12at7/12au7 do for it ?
A. The phase inverter splits the signal to go to the power tubes. It is not a part of the preamp, but of the power amp. If you have a lower gain tube in the PI, then the power tubes receive a lower signal. You don't notice this in volume, but more in terms of sound. There's a lot more "compression" in a lower gain tube, meaning that the sound is tighter.
This also affects the presence control, as that usually feeds back from the OPT into the phase inverter stage.