- Joined
- Oct 31, 2023
- Messages
- 101
- Reaction score
- 62
Things are more complicated than they looked at first but I am getting a better understanding. I’m still looking only at the speaker outputs and need to repeat observations at the loop out for preamp only given what I’ve learned.
Turning down the presence all the way fixes the problem on every channel and mode. Turning up presence makes it as bad as it can be. Cranking channel gain and volume maximizes the problem.
Extreme mode can still exhibit the problem if the presence is turned all the way up. I thought for a minute that all feedback was disabled in Extreme mode but this is not true. C63 still passes some feedback signal in Extreme mode.
The high frequency spikes are only partly asymmetrical on channel 3. Turn up presence and you see them on both rising and falling edges.
The problem interacts with the global EQ enough that it was confusing me. I turned EQ off on all channels for all the tests above.
I tested with an attenuator between the amp and cab speaker. As I turned down the speaker volume with the attenuator the problem started to go away. In load only mode there was no problem. The problem was greatest in 0dB mode—no attenuation. I want to repeat these observations with more test conditions to be completely sure of this.
So now I need to see if I can reproduce the problem in the preamp only. I don’t think so based on what I saw with the attenuator in load mode.
Here is one thing that could be happening. All those capacitors in the feedback loop add phase shifts at high frequencies. And the speaker also can’t comply as well to high frequencies. So we have more negative feedback up there and it is inaccurate because of those phase shifts. The hypothesis is that is why we see these spikes. The feedback loop is amplifying the error instead of reducing it.
I’ll pick this up again tomorrow.
Turning down the presence all the way fixes the problem on every channel and mode. Turning up presence makes it as bad as it can be. Cranking channel gain and volume maximizes the problem.
Extreme mode can still exhibit the problem if the presence is turned all the way up. I thought for a minute that all feedback was disabled in Extreme mode but this is not true. C63 still passes some feedback signal in Extreme mode.
The high frequency spikes are only partly asymmetrical on channel 3. Turn up presence and you see them on both rising and falling edges.
The problem interacts with the global EQ enough that it was confusing me. I turned EQ off on all channels for all the tests above.
I tested with an attenuator between the amp and cab speaker. As I turned down the speaker volume with the attenuator the problem started to go away. In load only mode there was no problem. The problem was greatest in 0dB mode—no attenuation. I want to repeat these observations with more test conditions to be completely sure of this.
So now I need to see if I can reproduce the problem in the preamp only. I don’t think so based on what I saw with the attenuator in load mode.
Here is one thing that could be happening. All those capacitors in the feedback loop add phase shifts at high frequencies. And the speaker also can’t comply as well to high frequencies. So we have more negative feedback up there and it is inaccurate because of those phase shifts. The hypothesis is that is why we see these spikes. The feedback loop is amplifying the error instead of reducing it.
I’ll pick this up again tomorrow.