Hello fellow brave Nomad owners. Not seeing a bias mod here and seeing some requests I'll post my best guess. Now, the mod I did was not for the faint at heart because I drilled some holes in the chassis. You can accomplish the same thing w/o destruction with some thought. I did this for three reasons: (1) I bought a matched quad of 6L6's off my friend who owns a music store, in lieu of Dougs Tubes, The Tube Store, Eurotubes or Mesa, and, of course, they ended up colder than a gold diggers *** in the Klondikes - like nearly half power. (2) I gig frequently, I carry spare tubes and parts, and I needed a way to change tubes on the fly without tearing my amp apart. (3) With all the Nomad bashing and seeing the resale value of Nomads go for 50% of the original retail price, I'm relatively sure I'm not screwing up a future collectors item. I have a Nomad 100 2x12 combo which is a real ball buster and a PITA to work on.
Bias section before mod:
Power section before mod:
Bias section after mod:
Power section after mod:
What I was going for was a way to adjust the bias without removing the feature of being able to switch between 6L6 or EL34 and this is why I selected to remove the 56K resistor and replace it with a 33k safety resistor and a 50K pot. Some quick calulations told me this would meet the sweet spot of most output tubes. The 1 ohm, 1 watt, 1% resistor installed between the 6L6 cathodes and ground is a way for me to measure the amount of cathode current flowing though all four tubes. I just plug my voltmeter across the resistor and mV = mA. This is the same priciple many bias probes use except they usually measure one tube at a time. I was thinking about using a 1 ohm. 2W, 5% resistor for a safety factor, but, after testing, the max dissapation of the resistor will never get above .5 watts and I like the presision of 1%. I mean, if the resistor does burn at 1 watt, which would mean the amp would be trying to pump out 400+ watts, I hope it would burn up and save my output transformer!
Now some pictures:
56K resistor removed and the 33k safety resistor installed and shink wrapped:
Purple ground jumper removed and the black jumpers installed to the 1 ohm resistor:
Internal shot of the bias pot and test points:
Internal close-up of the bias pot and 1 ohm resistor. Notice how I jumpered the wiper of the pot to the unused pole. I did this in case the wiper fails and tries to nuke the amp. The pot is wired so that fully CCW that cathode current is at minimum and fully CW the cathode current is maximum:
External bias pot and test points. I know a military grade locking pot would be better, but, I did saw off the shaft to keep it from getting bumped:
Plate voltage = 442V:
Bias voltage = -41.4V. Quite a difference from the fixed -50V:
Cathode current x4 6L6 = 150.5mA (shown in mV):
OK. Some calculations: P idle = 442V x 150.5mA = 66.5 watts. I'm in the ballpark - could be a little hotter. You would like to get to 70% plate dissapation for class AB push-pull.
The cool thing here is I can replace my output tubes and bias the amp, with a voltmeter and a screw driver, without even taking the back cover off.
Now - I seen some late discussion on reverb mods. The most chatter I've heard is that the reverb is heard on channel one but is nearly non existant on channels two and three and I agree with this complaint. I could see if you start tinkering around with the 475k resistor or the 500pF cap could cause distortion while using channel one with reverb. I may try to raise the cap's value later. The next logical choice would be to bump up the signal coming back out of the reverb. I can't take credit for this mod as I have seen it here before, but sadly, the link has been removed so I'm posting my version of it here. Disclaimer - you will probably never get the reverb from your Nomad to sound like a Fender Twin without serious $ and time.
Reverb circuit before mod:
Reverb circuit after mod:
The two 330K resistor are throttling the signal back into the mix so I paralleled two 220K resistors across them lowering the resistance to 130K. The result was that the reverb was just as present in channels two and three as channel one.
Reverb picture before mod. The two 330K resistors are near the gray leads coming from the reverb pots:
Reverb picture after mod:
Well, I haven't tried the mud mod because I don't think my amp is muddy and I have the switchable graphic eg to compensate for it. I guess my ear just likes dark sounding amps. I don't use the effects loop so I did not do the series loop mod.
I hope this helps somebody and I know there is more than one way to skin a cat. I'm satisfied with my Nomad. Happy modding!
- Pat.