misterwhizzy
Well-known member
Yes, it's the most misleading title of all time. So sue me.
A while back I installed a cathode bypass capacitor on the second gain stage of my Jet City to boost the gain on the higher frequencies a bit. I put it on a push pull pot that controlled the depth in the power section. Here it is before I started messing with it.
I ended up pushing or pulling the pot any time I went to switch from dirty to clean, and it was just a hassle trying to find it on the back of the amp and pull or push the pot straight out without turning it at all. It's a nice feature, and it does its job, but it's hard to access. So I decided to put a hole in the front of my amp. I've never done this before.
View attachment 31777
I set it up so I can add a second switch later, because I'm still thinking of one more thing I may want to add on the front panel before everything's said and done. I removed the depth pot, desoldered the cap and the wiring, ran new wiring around the board after I twisted it together, and soldered it to the new switch at the front of the amp.
View attachment 31779
Made sure everything was soldered properly, buttoned it up, and here we go.
View attachment 31780
I think it may have dropped the noise floor a little bit as well, but it may just be wishful thinking or the PI tube I swapped out last week, but it seems to work pretty well. I'm slightly disappointed in that the effect is not as drastic as I remember. Since it takes so little time to switch the setting now, I can hear the differences more quickly now and rely on my tone memory less. It definitely adds some hair and smooths out the highs, but it's not as dramatic as I remembered.
Anyways, I'm glad a forum member suggested this mod to me, and I won't out him in case he doesn't want to be named, but thanks, dude.
A while back I installed a cathode bypass capacitor on the second gain stage of my Jet City to boost the gain on the higher frequencies a bit. I put it on a push pull pot that controlled the depth in the power section. Here it is before I started messing with it.
I ended up pushing or pulling the pot any time I went to switch from dirty to clean, and it was just a hassle trying to find it on the back of the amp and pull or push the pot straight out without turning it at all. It's a nice feature, and it does its job, but it's hard to access. So I decided to put a hole in the front of my amp. I've never done this before.
View attachment 31777
I set it up so I can add a second switch later, because I'm still thinking of one more thing I may want to add on the front panel before everything's said and done. I removed the depth pot, desoldered the cap and the wiring, ran new wiring around the board after I twisted it together, and soldered it to the new switch at the front of the amp.
View attachment 31779
Made sure everything was soldered properly, buttoned it up, and here we go.
View attachment 31780
I think it may have dropped the noise floor a little bit as well, but it may just be wishful thinking or the PI tube I swapped out last week, but it seems to work pretty well. I'm slightly disappointed in that the effect is not as drastic as I remember. Since it takes so little time to switch the setting now, I can hear the differences more quickly now and rely on my tone memory less. It definitely adds some hair and smooths out the highs, but it's not as dramatic as I remembered.
Anyways, I'm glad a forum member suggested this mod to me, and I won't out him in case he doesn't want to be named, but thanks, dude.