Hey guys, I have a Peche A La Mouche amp, which is awesome, but the one non-awesome thing about it is that it buzzes at high volumes. (I.e., when I'm not playing, you can hear a pretty loud buzz coming out of the amp.)
I don't know anything about amps, but I have a theory that this is because the cable is not grounded. It's a European-made amp and only has two prongs on the plug, not the third/ground plug. Does that sound like the culprit? And, if so, what's the best way to ground it to fix the buzz?
Adrian
Comments
Swang on,
I like Steveareno's suggestion for the 12AY7 tube swap as it will warm it up nicely. You'll hear a greater difference if coming from a 12AX7 than you will a 12AT7 - I see the Peche A La Mouche Amp can come with different 12X_7 configs.
Here is a page I had bookmarked from ages ago when I was swapping tubes on a few vintage amps.
http://cydathria.com/fdm/12AX7_sub.html
I used to have a great tube swapping page bookmarked but it's vanished - had everything! Even suggestions on the dreaded 50L6 tube (straight wall current). But I digress...
Just be careful and give the amp to a professional for work - we want you around.
Swang on,
Stevereano's idea of the preamp tube swap will probably help a lot.
Thanks for the info! I was using the Peche pickup with it -- but it's now being borrowed by a friend while I live overseas. Looking forward to trying your technique in a year and a half, when I have the amp again.
Nothing wrong with a 3 prong plug.
An alligator clip from the amp chassis to a radiator will also ground the unit. But thats to old school for you I think.
Alternatively you can take the same alligator clip and attach one end to the chassis and the other to the center screw of the wall outlet which will also ground the unit.
The low out put of these "vintage" style pickups and the relatively low volumes that they are used at is the reason we accept them. The low range coil rating , which is very low, I've measured them in the 3.5k range gets us to a pretty flat audio response which is good and the low range also lessens the output signal , so noise seems at a low volume to be acceptable.
If you turn up that amp you might not like what you hear though.
Turn up the amp the ground hum gets louder.
If you orient the pickup coil to the transformer coil of the amp it will lessen but not go away.
Also get hip to the fact that the Peche lead has a conductive film as a shield so that if you roll over the cord with a desk chair , say in a recording studio that may interrupt the shield and make the pickup more noisy. It will still work but it will have a louder ground hum.
So check if your pickup cord isn't the problem.
I replaced the lead on my Peche with a braided shield cable after wearing the first one out and now have much less noise from mine.