Sundragon STD manual V1.pdf
suprised to see 6L6GC's "30W max PD" in this! i thought with 8 watts clean before breakup and 20W full on they would have used 6L6GB's "23W max PD". what dissipation do you think he's biased them to?The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
suprised to see 6L6GC's "30W max PD" in this! i thought with 8 watts clean before breakup and 20W full on they would have used 6L6GB's "23W max PD". what dissipation do you think he's biased them to?
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
I just made a few measurements of a Sundragon's GE 6L6GC output tubes, wondering whether they were oddly biased for very little headroom. At the tube sockets, with the 6L6GCs in place, I measured:
* Cathode resistor (the 6l6GCs share a common cathode resistor): 252 ohms
* Pin 3 to ground (B+ at the 6L6GC plates): 385Vdc in Standby, 388Vdc with amp On.
* Cathode current (one 6L6GC): 52.8ma in Standby, 48.7ma with amp On.
* Calculated cathode bias (6L6GC cathodes to ground, amp On): 24.5Vdc
* Calculated cathode-to-plate voltage, amp On: 363Vdc
* Calculated plate dissipation, amp On: 17.7W per tube
The Standby switch shorts together the outputs from the phase inverter plates, so the output tubes are always drawing current - my Gretsch 6154 (built by Valco) does the same thing. Since the 6L6GC plate voltage and current draw are slightly larger with the amp off Standby, I'm guessing something minor is happening to the 6L6 operating points with their grids connected together and floating from ground in Standby.
The answer to my original question is the tubes are cathode biased to run cool (70% of max dissipation). Normally, cathode biased tubes in a guitar amp are running at close to max plate dissipation and often more, while the "biasing rule of thumb" says they should run at 90%. Regardless, this Sundragon's 6L6GCs are running at a cool 70%. It explains why the Sundragon does not compress like a tweed Deluxe when pushed and suggests the Sundragon's distortion is in the preamp.
* Cathode resistor (the 6l6GCs share a common cathode resistor): 252 ohms
* Pin 3 to ground (B+ at the 6L6GC plates): 385Vdc in Standby, 388Vdc with amp On.
* Cathode current (one 6L6GC): 52.8ma in Standby, 48.7ma with amp On.
* Calculated cathode bias (6L6GC cathodes to ground, amp On): 24.5Vdc
* Calculated cathode-to-plate voltage, amp On: 363Vdc
* Calculated plate dissipation, amp On: 17.7W per tube
The Standby switch shorts together the outputs from the phase inverter plates, so the output tubes are always drawing current - my Gretsch 6154 (built by Valco) does the same thing. Since the 6L6GC plate voltage and current draw are slightly larger with the amp off Standby, I'm guessing something minor is happening to the 6L6 operating points with their grids connected together and floating from ground in Standby.
The answer to my original question is the tubes are cathode biased to run cool (70% of max dissipation). Normally, cathode biased tubes in a guitar amp are running at close to max plate dissipation and often more, while the "biasing rule of thumb" says they should run at 90%. Regardless, this Sundragon's 6L6GCs are running at a cool 70%. It explains why the Sundragon does not compress like a tweed Deluxe when pushed and suggests the Sundragon's distortion is in the preamp.
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
are the couplers from the phase to power tubes mis-matched like the supro? also the notes on the supro schematic say some did'nt have a bias capacitor on the power tubes,is there one on the sundragon?
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
Holy smokes!! I've been away from the forum taking care of some life stuff and I'm very happy to come back and see so many of you contributing to this thread!
Lots of great new information since I last checked, especially the goodies from Kingamps- thanks for the bias and voltage information! I think that 'cool bias' and standby switch setup are good clues- my Silvertone 1484 has a standby switch like that (which I replaced with a 1M pot for a poor man's master volume), but I can get surprisingly decent LZ1 tones out of that amp (blasphemy?) which also has a 'cold' ~75% bias on the 6L6s, but different bias circuitry. I'm also wondering if there's a 25uf cathode bypass cap in parallel to the cathode resistor on the Sundragon amps (like on later Supro 1690Ts).
Your comment on the preamp crunch also had me looking around at the schematic for clues, but maybe the biggest clue was in the Sundragon user manual (thanks Geoff 1965!) which has an interesting note under the Tone Control section that states...
"The Tone Control is quite effective. Turning it up (clockwise) adds high frequencies and because it is so effective, it also adds gain for more overdrive."
Why would a passive tone control ADD high frequencies instead of attenuate low and mid frequencies? And why would it ADD gain instead of just sort of recovering it? Mitch would certainly know this, and I'm sure he wouldn't allow that to be printed if it was a mistake.
And here's the best clue from the user manual just below the Tone Control section...
"Note: Because Sundragon has 2 inputs per channel that are voiced differently, the inputs are “open”. The result is that when nothing is plugged into the amp, you will hear background noise when you turn up either Volume control. While this is not the case on some amplifiers, this is normal for Sundragon."
What?! The inputs aren't "open" on the 1690T schematic. According to the schematic there are two switched input jacks in circuit with the two non-switching jacks, which wouldn't cause noise when you turn up the amp with nothing plugged in. Why would Sundragon do this on purpose? Could this suggest that the inputs are wired up in a weird way, maybe to use both sections of the V1 12AX7 in parallel without an external cable jumper? I know you can jumper two channels with or without switching jacks, but I think there's something funny going on here. And from what I understand, the Sundragon amp still has tremolo, so they didn't steal the tremolo section of V2 to add gain.
Also, welcome back ZP! And welcome to the forum, Janalex! Your comment about the OT to speaker mismatch is a good one, and I think has a lot to do with the lo-fi (but thick and juicy!) tone. 2 ohms into a single 8 ohm speaker is not efficient at all but it doesn't mean it can't be fun!
Thanks all, and I can't wait to hear about what you make of these new 'clues'! If we keep this up, we'll all have faithful clones of the faithful clone of Jimmy's Supro... which will sound nothing like Jimmy's Supro. Ha!
Lots of great new information since I last checked, especially the goodies from Kingamps- thanks for the bias and voltage information! I think that 'cool bias' and standby switch setup are good clues- my Silvertone 1484 has a standby switch like that (which I replaced with a 1M pot for a poor man's master volume), but I can get surprisingly decent LZ1 tones out of that amp (blasphemy?) which also has a 'cold' ~75% bias on the 6L6s, but different bias circuitry. I'm also wondering if there's a 25uf cathode bypass cap in parallel to the cathode resistor on the Sundragon amps (like on later Supro 1690Ts).
Your comment on the preamp crunch also had me looking around at the schematic for clues, but maybe the biggest clue was in the Sundragon user manual (thanks Geoff 1965!) which has an interesting note under the Tone Control section that states...
"The Tone Control is quite effective. Turning it up (clockwise) adds high frequencies and because it is so effective, it also adds gain for more overdrive."
Why would a passive tone control ADD high frequencies instead of attenuate low and mid frequencies? And why would it ADD gain instead of just sort of recovering it? Mitch would certainly know this, and I'm sure he wouldn't allow that to be printed if it was a mistake.
And here's the best clue from the user manual just below the Tone Control section...
"Note: Because Sundragon has 2 inputs per channel that are voiced differently, the inputs are “open”. The result is that when nothing is plugged into the amp, you will hear background noise when you turn up either Volume control. While this is not the case on some amplifiers, this is normal for Sundragon."
What?! The inputs aren't "open" on the 1690T schematic. According to the schematic there are two switched input jacks in circuit with the two non-switching jacks, which wouldn't cause noise when you turn up the amp with nothing plugged in. Why would Sundragon do this on purpose? Could this suggest that the inputs are wired up in a weird way, maybe to use both sections of the V1 12AX7 in parallel without an external cable jumper? I know you can jumper two channels with or without switching jacks, but I think there's something funny going on here. And from what I understand, the Sundragon amp still has tremolo, so they didn't steal the tremolo section of V2 to add gain.
Also, welcome back ZP! And welcome to the forum, Janalex! Your comment about the OT to speaker mismatch is a good one, and I think has a lot to do with the lo-fi (but thick and juicy!) tone. 2 ohms into a single 8 ohm speaker is not efficient at all but it doesn't mean it can't be fun!
Thanks all, and I can't wait to hear about what you make of these new 'clues'! If we keep this up, we'll all have faithful clones of the faithful clone of Jimmy's Supro... which will sound nothing like Jimmy's Supro. Ha!
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
Check out the reviews of the Supro 1695T as well,it’s supro’s take of the page amp except using 6973 output tubes.they have a parallel link between the channels which lets you use both volume controls for the extra gain.
the tone might be similar to the 18W lite2 which interacts the volume & tone pot and the tone has an effect on volume rather than the normal type tone wiper to ground configuration.
another point regarding gain is look at the 1690T schematic notes on the V2b variant with 220K & 2K2 “very aggressive”
the tone might be similar to the 18W lite2 which interacts the volume & tone pot and the tone has an effect on volume rather than the normal type tone wiper to ground configuration.
another point regarding gain is look at the 1690T schematic notes on the V2b variant with 220K & 2K2 “very aggressive”
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
It's a shame only the specs for the 40-180xx series seem to be publicly available. Any idea where to find the datasheet for those?
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
Any chance of a few images of the inside of the chassis?kingamps wrote: ↑Sun 01/17/21 6:40 pmI just made a few measurements of a Sundragon's GE 6L6GC output tubes, wondering whether they were oddly biased for very little headroom. At the tube sockets, with the 6L6GCs in place, I measured:
* Cathode resistor (the 6l6GCs share a common cathode resistor): 252 ohms
* Pin 3 to ground (B+ at the 6L6GC plates): 385Vdc in Standby, 388Vdc with amp On.
* Cathode current (one 6L6GC): 52.8ma in Standby, 48.7ma with amp On.
* Calculated cathode bias (6L6GC cathodes to ground, amp On): 24.5Vdc
* Calculated cathode-to-plate voltage, amp On: 363Vdc
* Calculated plate dissipation, amp On: 17.7W per tube
The Standby switch shorts together the outputs from the phase inverter plates, so the output tubes are always drawing current - my Gretsch 6154 (built by Valco) does the same thing. Since the 6L6GC plate voltage and current draw are slightly larger with the amp off Standby, I'm guessing something minor is happening to the 6L6 operating points with their grids connected together and floating from ground in Standby.
The answer to my original question is the tubes are cathode biased to run cool (70% of max dissipation). Normally, cathode biased tubes in a guitar amp are running at close to max plate dissipation and often more, while the "biasing rule of thumb" says they should run at 90%. Regardless, this Sundragon's 6L6GCs are running at a cool 70%. It explains why the Sundragon does not compress like a tweed Deluxe when pushed and suggests the Sundragon's distortion is in the preamp.
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
The grids of power tubes should never be allowed to float. Are you sure that's really how it's wired? I would expect bias current to be all over the place in Standby if that's the case.
Jack
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
FWIW, Supro 1690t schematic from Hoffman Forum with notes re similarities to 1615, specifically noting the under powered OT.
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
Well this is awkward. . . I joined in 2004 but haven't logged in to this site since 2007 apparently. Followed this thread back in.
For the record, the 18watter I built from hanging out here almost 15 years ago is still going strong and while it has not seen much action for a while (I became a vintage amp junkie), I gigged with it earlier this year and it sounded great.
Fascinating thread. Carry on!
For the record, the 18watter I built from hanging out here almost 15 years ago is still going strong and while it has not seen much action for a while (I became a vintage amp junkie), I gigged with it earlier this year and it sounded great.
Fascinating thread. Carry on!
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
I'm contacting you for more info on the Sundragon amp. Are you still on the project?
Do you have a wiring diagram for this amp?
Do you have a wiring diagram for this amp?
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
Hi all.
Janalex notes "The first place to start would be to change my output transformer to the Coronado output transformer which I believe measures in the 2 ohm range."
Can anyone else confirm that the 1690T did indeed have approximately a 2 ohm OT and the Sundragon has a 8 ohm OT? If both of these are correct, is it likely that the OT in Page's amp was replaced when it went in for repair?
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
Happened upon some gut shots of the Sundragon preamp chassis today. Enjoy.
https://imgur.io/a/cZCZ5kK
https://imgur.io/a/cZCZ5kK
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Re: The Jimmy Page Sundragon (Supro) Amp- Help!
I realise this is an old thread but has anyone from this forum built one based on the research?
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