My first amp project was in the form of "marshallizing" an epiphone valve junior, and one of the things I did at the time was put in a switchable conjunctive filter. It really smoothed out the edginess and was great for lead tones. The CF is something I think that has been popularized, to an extent, by Dr Z since he incorporates this into the CG. From my research it seems that this idea is also not something new either...it was described in a handbook way back in the 1930s.
I'm in the tweaking process on my 18-watt Superlite II and thought I would research this a little bit, and came across a "snubber" kit from AES:
https://www.tubesandmore.com/sites/default/files/associated_files/snubber_article_k-snub.pdfIt is similar to yet different from the CF that is mentioned in most other designs. From what I've read, a CF is simply a cap and resistor (of appropriate value and voltage/wattage) in series across the OT primaries. However, this snubber circuit appears a little different...there's a 5W 3K resistor coming off each plate of the output tubes, and a cap/8.2M ohm resistor in parallel for each tube, but connected in series with each other (hard to explain but the article above shows this).
Are these essentially accomplishing (or trying to accomplish) the same thing? I was considering just installing a 5W 10K resistor and a cap in series as shown in a typical CF, but was wondering if there is any advantage to the snubber circuit over this design. The more simplistic CF approach would allow for easier experimentation with cap values to achieve the desired level of "smoothing" compared to the relatively more complex snubber circuit.
I've read over some threads on this forum as well as EL34 world and 18 watt, but didn't see anything that addressed the snubber and CF and compared the pros/cons of each.
Any insight you might be able to give on the topic is greatly appreciated. Thanks!