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Reducing
Noise in Tweed 5F1 Champ Kit
by Mike Marsh

How can I
reduce the noise in my
Tweed 5F1 Champ
Kit?
There are three
mods that I found very helpful to reduce the hum level of a stock 5F1
champ and most other tweed series amps as well.
·
Note: These mods will only be effective If you have checked that the
shorting contacts of your jacks are working properly and that the ground
connections in your amp are solid. Check these two functions first or
you are wasting your time with the mods.
-
A mod to the
filament circuit designed to have it inject less noise into the signal
path of the amp. This requires you take 2 pieces of green filament
wire twist it tightly into lengths of 4.5 inches (for connections
between 6V6 and 12AX7) and 4 inches (for connections between the pilot
light and the 6v6 filament socket pins).
Then take the two
green wires from the Power Transformer (6.3VAC supply) twist them and
connect one wire each to the pilot light tangs.
The pilot light and the filament circuit is no longer grounded on one
side, instead you take two 100 Ohm resistors connect one end of each to
the pilot light tangs with the filament supply (from Tranny) and Feed
(to tube) the other end of each resister get connected together and then
to ground.
This is commonly called a virtual center tap. If done correctly it
virtually eliminates Filament hum. It it not required in amps that have
transformers with a filament supply center tap.
-
Using shielded
wires replace the stock cloth wires on the input jacks, Volume control
and first grid of the Preamp will serve to make the preamp section
resistant to interference from the filament supply or any RFI in the
area. typically 1.5 foot length is enough to do the two input jack
connections to the 68K input resistors, The Volume control input from
the first stage coupling cap and the return to the grid of the second
half of the Preamp tube.
The sheilded wire should have the shield grounded at one end only. (I
typically ground the Volume control leads to the casing of the pot or
left most terminal, the input wires to the sleeve terminal on the jack
and the 1st stage grid lead to the tube socket mounting screw.
-
Since the stock
filtering values were selected when the standard line voltage was
105-110VAC, it is now commonly believed that the tweed era amps and
some Blackface models are under filtered. We now enjoy AC line
supplies of 120VAC in some areas in can actually be closer to 130VAC.
In some, but not all cases, the stock filtering is not strong enough
and results in an unacceptable level of 60 cycle hum.
There are two ways that this can be tested one is to eliminate the
cause by putting the amp on a variac set to 110VAC. If by doing this
the amp hum comes down to a normal level then additional filtering
will likely help. If it does not, then it is more likely that the
noise or hum is casued by filament interference, improper biasing (too
much Gain), a noisey component, etc.
The recommended filter changes are to up the main filter to 100uf/500
(this will only improve low end tightness) and screen supply to
40uf/450 (no real change in tone). I do not recommend changing the
preamp filter as it will change the tonal characteristics of the amp.
Sometimes it's a good change sometimes not, use your ears to determine
if it's worth it.
I heard a lot of debate on the internet about the values and brands of
caps for this type of mod. I have found that the difference in brands
and their ability to filter out hum or ghost notes is quite
remarkable. I try to stick to the following brands for filters: Ruby
Caps, Sprague Atom and Tech Cap.
I'm not saying there aren't others that work as well or even better,
only that these are the ones I have had success with.
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