So, I've built my Crack and I'm loving it. I have the Speedball upgrade built and waiting to install after I get some listening hours on the basic unit, but my thoughts are turning back to this question I raised before I ordered the kit.
Rather than upgrade my Crack too much, I think I'm going to order a Carackatwoa and upgrade that, as according to everything I've read, an upgraded Crack will never better an upgraded C2A and I want to stick with OTL. That said, I still want to do away with a volume pot in the amp.
Listening tests in my main system, using the previously mention TVC as a stepped attenuator between source and amp has shown a night and day difference in sound quality in favour of the TVC as volume control - as one would expect given the price of a good TVC vs a carbon track potentiometer. So, I plan to change the pot on the crack and have it as a portable headphone amp, while the C2A will always be used in the main system with the TVC.
Now, thanks for your patience. The question is, will it be sufficient to just drop a 100k resister from the grid of the input tube to ground and the signal straight to the grid. That's effectively what's happening when I run the Crack-pot (lol) wide open, so my thinking is that this would be fine.
But... In many similar tube amps schematics, I see a 1k resistor in the signal path between signal and grid (part of a low pass filter?) and a 1m resister to ground, often as well as a 100k-250k pot where one is present. Can anyone tell me why this might be necessary or desirable. I understand that the 1m resistor is giving the grid of the input tube a reference to ground, presumably in the event that the tube should fail, but isn't the 100k resistor (or pot carbon track) also providing this? Why do some amps have both?
All answers and thoughts gratefully appreciated.
-- Steve