Reverb wrote:
Ceri@tone modifiactions are described on Ceri@tone's forum in a "New Lightning Layout - Special Announcement" thread. Of all the mods mentioned, I'm interested in "change of resistor from 22K to 4.7K as filter decoupling to cathode follower V2 stage". Why that resistor?
I have no idea. I hope Nik know what he's doing here. The Lightning is a very well-proven design, and you don't usually hear complaints about it.
Stoo wrote:
I suspect it's to give that stage more headroom by increasing the plate voltage.
That's quite possibly true. But I wonder why would anyone feel the need to do that....
Reverb wrote:
Why not playing with paralleled V1?
There isn't usually enough signal level present at the first preamp stage of an amp to overdrive it. So the component values at the first preamp stage are usually the least critical of any of the stages.
Reverb wrote:
When paralleling an 12AX7, sometimes I see halving of anode resistor's, cathode resistor's and cathode cap's values (R4, R5, C2 on Trinity 15 schematics).
Not very often. If you halve the cathode and especially the anode values when paralleling triodes in a 12AX7, you keep the stage gain about the same, while reducing the output impedance. Sometimes that's useful fro driving a tone stack. However, if you keep the same resistor values as for a single triode, you get an increase in gain of around 1.3 times the gain of the single cathode stage. You see this with Marshall 18W type amps as well as Matchless style amps.
Reverb wrote:
I'm asking because I'm interested in the possibility of reducing "harsh" distortion from Trinity 15.
You're the first person I've heard say they were getting harsh distortion from their TC-15.
To me it sounds likely that something isn't 100% OK in your amp. Have you gone through and checked all the voltages? Also what kind of an OT are you using. Is it from Trinity, or is it from a local source? Are you using good quality tubes?
The only thing some folks might possibly want to tweak, in common with many Vox and Matchless amps, is to reduce the 1.2k cathode resistor in the PI to 820 ohms, to help reduce the possibility of getting some fizziness at certain settings. Ken Fischer has also been known to use 750 ohms for that resistor in some of his Vox-like TW Rocket amps. But apart from that, as someone once said about the TC-15, it's hard to improve on perfection.