Moodknyller wrote:So apparently it took me almost a year to solve this issue.
I tried swapping, adding and removing a lot of parts. Some were an improvement, most were not.
I found the smaller cold clipper to add fizz, but I kinda liked the fluidity it gave me so I have it on a switch to go between 12k/17k IIRC.
Changed plate resistors, added plate bypass caps, removed cathode bypass caps, increased nfb etc. and all it gave me was a blanket over speaker.
Turns out cobra's fizz is largely coming from it's big coupling capacitors. Who knew cutting low end would calrify highs aswell.
I removed R4, and changed C9 to 2n2 and C41 to 3n3. Most of the fizz is gone, even at lower channel- and master volumes. Even the precence is somewhat useable now.
This also solved the need for attenuating fx-send level.
I feel like I'm getting even stronger bass, but it's not overloading the fx-loop anymore.
There is still some fizz on low volume and higher gain levels, but it also gets a bit mushy with higher gain.
So I guess I want the amp to feel a little easier to play with gain at current level. I think it comes down to cathode resistor values..?
Currently I have 1k8/1u, 2k7/1u, 12k, 820r/.68u
What value are the cobra coupling caps?
You have to think that early before distortion what the designer choses gets distorted and produces harmonics and then again and again so if some of the fizz is produced in the area of 6 khz who is to say that it is not a harmonic that started from a lower frequency right there between the first and second stage.
A lot of amp guys choose to actually cut bass early to keep it tight and reduce some fizz.
I don't find that necessary I mean palm mutes turn fizz to chunk and as you said it does give some fluidity. The opposite is cut too much and you have a more tight but sterile sound.
Some prefer to reduce the first couing cap and then the second by equal values or the first more and the second half of the reduction.
Some prefer to utilize the first stave bypass cap for that.
But why?
Why commit. You have a small eq pedal or a tube screamer do that exact job without taking away the ability of the amp to rock out more especially with single coils in my opinion.
Now for the fx loop when I had my dragon the best thing was to use a parallel loop which was already there and have one channel for rythm one for soloing.
The parallel config already is a mixer on the framus loop so you can pretty much avoid overloading the effect.
But you have to have an effect that
a) has at least +6db or more capability
b) high enough input impedance at least 10 times the output of the send
c) the ability to send back to the amp only the effected sound to avoid comb filtering by adding two dry sounds (the amps internal and the multi effect one which will be delayed by the ms it takes for the multibeffect to render. Hello phase cancelation).
For me the amp was perfect as it was with a g major. The g major is fully adjustable and can take up to +20 db with input and output control.
You also have the assignable solo boosts...
Also if you want a tighter sound why not applying more negetive feedback but I think you already tried it.
My moto is get away with as much of a loose sound you can instead of the opposite. You can always boost it later on and the more you push the amp the fuller it sounds vs an internally modded one.