Hi again
Re. microphonics with the EF86.....
I had a Selmer Thunderbird up until recently, and that is a 50 watt combo with 2 x 12" speakers. Each of it's 2 channels has an EF86 and a 12AX7. Even though they were built in the same era as the Voxes, the Selmers were ahead in some engineering aspects, in this case...shock mounted valve sockets. I used to get that thing shaking and didn't have any problems with microphonics.
The DC30-ish amp i have just built is a head, and i never usually put a head on top of a speaker cabinet (but i did use a nice shock-mounted socket anyway). Some of the AC4 circuits i have built (the AC4 uses only an EF86 as a pre, straight into a single EL84) have been in little combo's, sometimes even with a 12" spkr, but with only 4 (albeit a LOUD 4) watts, chasis shaking and microphonics have never been a problem. And i do like to dial up the more 'thumpy' end of the tone spectrum, too.
Perhaps i've just been lucky........i've dismanted a few old valve tape recorders and record players either for parts or converting or restoring, and the better ones have often had good shock-mounted sockets for the EF86's.
Thoughts for cooling down the 12AX7 (Top Boost) channel.....
Okay Daz....i'm gonna quote myself from an earlier post here (yeah, i know, but it's not like THAT, really, it's just i wrote it once already and i can save some time....hehe)......
"You see where the 12AX7 from the TB channel feeds the PI? There is a 220K resistor in series from the treble pot wiper going to the 0.01 cap and then into the PI. At that same junction (220K/0.01 cap) there is a 100K resistor to ground. The 220K/100K resistors form a voltage divider between the signal and ground, kinda like a pre-set pot. What you could do is create a voltage divider like this on the EF86 channel. "
Disgregard the last line of that, as yes, indeed that's a way to deal with the EF86 level....but the point this time is what i wrote about the 12AX7 channel....you already have a voltage divider built in there....the 220K resistor coming from the treble pot wiper, and then the 100K resistor that joins the 220K/0.01 cap and goes to ground.
So....you could think of that as a 320K pot (220K + 100K) from the treble pot wiper to ground, and it's pre-set at about 1/3 of the way up. Almost a pre-set master volume. If you replaced the 100K resistor with a piece of wire, you'd short the audio path directly to ground and get no signal into the P/I. So methinks...the answer lies somewhere in between 0 Ohms and 100K. Or you could INCREASE the 220K resistor and leave the 100K as is. Or change both resistor values to create a new ratio. The simplest way would be to replace the 100K with something lower...work your way down through the values, OR...even pull the 100K out and tack in a 100K pot there and find the setting that works for you and then read the resistance of the setting and install the closest value resistor. Listen, too, when you make changes here as there could be some discernable tone changes, but i suspect if they are noticeable, they will only be slight.
I spose you could try a 12AU7 in place of one of the two 12AX7's?....
BTW....if it was me, i'd restore the cathode caps back to the original specs, and any other changes, to keep the original tone once i started lowering the gain using these methods. I'd want the best tone available, just less of it.....but then again....and this is where it can get tedious....lose a little here and a little there might work better, and the only way to really know is try all the combinations, which drives me nuts! As i've said, the original preamps are not getting dirty, they're pushing the PI input too hard and causing that stage to distort. Which is a bit of a s**t for me actually, because it's going to compromise the effects loop i'm building into mine.
Anyway, let us know how you get on if you try that....it's a quick way to get results and it might get you just where you want to be.
I am having a look at the E80F valve, which is also known as a 6084, and it looks like it's a plug-in replacement? Have you tried it? I dunno if anyone would be making them, but i will look and see what the availability might be like. I'd be interested to hear one in action.
neil.
_________________ Lumbering dinosaur....what's a master volume?
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