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Oh no. C38 is one of those designators that is reused with the same name in two places. C38 also designates one of the caps in the feedback loop that only applies to Mark IV mode, on the Loop/Driver page in the upper right. I wanted to bridge C60 also but had trouble accessing it. I was believing that because the problem didn’t go away in mode 8 that it wasn’t caused by the lack of lower frequency feedback. But I noticed now that I made a mistake and C63 will be in the way as well. For thoroughness I’ll bridge that one too and make a better go at C60. But the fact that turning presence up all the way seems to make the problem worse… the resistance is up around 300K at that point between the 250K pot and 56K at R103. Feedback voltage at C58 would be reduced by 75% just from the resistive divider, then more through the two shorting caps.I am not sure I am reading this correctly. Sorry.
C38 is a bypass cap across the 69k resistor which is part of a voltage divider circuit to the control grid of V4B. Bridging that would effectively short out the signal to ground. C39 on the other hand couples the grid to the cathode of that same circuit, this will tune out some midrange and top end before the signal gets its non-linear amplification. You cannot bridge that component, it has to be removed to determine its affect. The same would apply to C38.
On my schematic C39 is the bypass cap a
Well, that is not quite as safe as I thought things were, but It still seems the signal path shouldn’t be able to affect the switch except during switching, which only happens when the control panel switches change?As for the JFETs (J175 P-channel), they are in full conduction mode when there is no voltage applied to the gate (open circuit, or pulled to 0 VDC). Since they are mostly used in the mute circuit, they will shunt the control grid signals to ground as long as the strobe mute transistor (NPN Darlington) is turned on [this will bring the voltage on the gates of the mute JFETS to 0VDC]. This should only be a momentary function. The collector side of the circuit is connected to the 24V supply but will also have some capacitors connected to ground. So, when the NPN transistor turns off, there will be a charge effect on the circuit that feeds the JFETs so they do not turn off instantly but gradually. (The JFETS must be turned off with 6V to 12V on the gates to stop them from shorting the signal.) The Mute for the reverb circuit has a larger capacitor so its charging rate will be slower than the other JFET mute circuits. As the voltage on the gate rises with the charging of the caps in the circuit, the channel will get pinched off slowly. In short form it begins to act like a variable resistor controlled by the rise in the gate voltage until it reaches the 6V which is where the pinch off occurs. It may still be conducting some current but will no longer be acting like a short. Once it gets to 12V, the JFET channel is turned off and the signal is permitted to pass onto the control grid of the next stage. The charge rate is quick but not immediate.
I looked at the Mark III and IIC+ schematics for this and also my favorite touchstone amps.The other factor to consider is the amps you have compared the Mark V90 too. I would assume they are either full class A or are Class A/B. I doubt they are a combination of both as that would infringe on the patents for the Simul-Class method used by the Mark V90 and its predecessors like the IIC+ DRG, Mark III DRG, Mark IVA or Mark IVB. The extended class A sockets of the Mark amps is what defines the overall tone of the output. More so with the IV or V than the III or IIC since they ran with a 15W class A for a total power of 75W, the IV class A was pushed a bit to 30W triode, and a bit more in pentode with a total power of 85W. Mark V90 also has the triode/pentode switch to deliver 45W in class A to 90W total power. I am unsure if the intent was to retain or recreate some of that EL34 Class A sound with the use of 6L6GC tubes so some boxy tuning may have been done that was to simulate that effect. I feel they missed the Mark with the IV and V.
To me boxiness means the thing that happens audibly when the presence frequencies and high treble and to a lesser extent the bass frequencies are attenuated, leaving a sharply defined midrange like the speaker is shut up in a box. Is that also what you mean? It could be caused by an impedance mismatch to the OT created by all the simul-shenanigans. If instead it is about an unnatural phase shift in the upper midrange… the presence feedback caps and phase splitter output caps can do that maybe?
By the way, I’ve switched back to two 5881 tubes on the inside and two 6L6GC tubes on the outer pair. Now that I’m not hurting my ears I prefer that tone to the EL34s I was using. I do want to add a bias pot and see if I can improve on what I’ve got.
Another change for later is to take out the extra capacitors so the phase splitter and driver looks more like a Mark IIC+. I feel it is likely to improve the tone. And I’m going to try using 45W pentode mode only for a while, with the HotPlate power attenuator to help get lower volume and earlier breakup. I feel it might be easiest to optimize the amp for the best sound in just one mode for now.
I would love to convert this amp to straight class AB running somewhere in the 30-50W range. It could use a pair of 5881 tubes and the best available upgrade OT for a Fender Bassman. I shouldn’t get into a big project in this crowded chassis though, and maybe I will want to leave things close to the original so I can still sell the combo some day.
The JP2C on the other hand does not have that tuning. Does not sound shrill or boxy. But then again it is based on the IIC+ HGR model. 100W/60W class A/B amp. Not odd overtones or shrill artifacts in the signal at all. Power tube saturation is there but different.
Mark VII is still a Simul Class (DRG) but Mesa must have decided to ditch the boxy tones and ice pick flair for something more useful. It is very close to the character of the JP2C but yet different in its delivery and tone density. I much prefer the Full Class A/B of the JP2C at 100W but that is my preference. Seems that my favorite amps are all Class A/B. the Mark VII is an exception, so it has gained more respect and admiration. As for the power capacity, it is on par with the JP2C or the Badlander 100.
I think I’m with you on that. I’ve never had an amp with four output tubes except for V90 though, so I’m still liking the two tube AB amps best.