From: JaySG Date: 1/12/2001 12:22 AM Subject: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters This seems like something to discuss. I'm including some RCA text after the Dr. Z snippet. Please bear with and keep on reading. Q: What other specific features are unique to your amps? A: I probably have a couple of original designs that are unique to my amps, and they were all evolved from a circuit that’s called a conjunctive filter. It’s a filter that goes across the primary side of the output transformer. The Carmen Ghia has a very traditional conjunctive filter, or corrective filter, as it’s described in the RCA Receiver’s Handbook. It affects the primary impedance of the transformer and allows frequencies to be very flat, or balanced. From say, 100Hz to 3K, the amplitude is the same. So from the high E to low E strings if your pick attack is the same, you’ll get the same volume from the notes. The volume of individual notes isn’t frequency dependent. So going back to what we were saying earlier about the touch dynamic of our amps, all that is related to the conjunctive filters that we use, and you’re really in control because of them. Q: And this is unique to the Z’s? A: No one else uses it. It’s something I found in an old RCA book of my dad’s, and again, it’s referred to as a corrective filter. It was just a little side note on how to make an amplifier more linear within a certain band of frequencies. When you strum a chord, each note makes it’s own contribution to the sound without one note overpowering the other. Jazz players love it when they’re playing those big, 6-string chords—it really puts a twinkle their eye when they hear it. The Prescription is another one in which I went with a different approach with the conjunctive filter. I have Todd Sharp to thank for that. We were in the tuning room for a Rod Stewart show and I’d sent Todd some parts for a Dr. Z Prescription he was using. We started playing around, and before you know it, we had evolved it into a really cool sound with different values of resistors and caps that we used. It’s funny how working with artists, you develop things. --------------------------------------------- From a RCA Receiving Tube Manual: A corrective filter can be used to improve the frequency characteristic of an output stage using a beam power tube or a pentode when inverse feedback is not applicable. The filter consists of a resistor and a capacitor connection in series across the primary of the output transformer. Connected in this way, the filter is in parallel with the plate load impedance reflected from the voice-coil by the output transformer. The magnitude of this reflected impedance increases with increasing frequency in the middle and upper audio range. The impedance of the filter, however, decreases with increasing frequency. It follows that by use of the proper values for the resistance and the capacitance in the filter, the effective load impedance on the output tubes can be made practically constant for all frequencies in the middle and upper audio range. The result is an improvement in the frequency characteristic of the output stage. The resistance to be used in the filter for a push-pull stage is 1.3 times the recommended plate-to-plate load resistance; or, for a single-tube stage, is 1.3 times the recommended plate load resistance. The capacitance in the filter should have a value such that the voltage gain of the output stage at a frequency of 1000 cycles or higher is equal to the voltage gain at 400 cycles. A method of determining the proper value of capacitance for the filter is to make two measurements of the output voltage across the primary of the output trasformer: first, when a 400-cycle signal is applied to the input, and second, when a 1000-cycle signal of the same voltage as the 400-cycle signal is applied to the input. The correct value of capacitance is the one which gives equal output voltages for the two signal inputs. In practice, this values is usually found to be in the order of 0.05 microfarad. ---------------------------------------------- From: Jason (j1c1a1@aol.com) Date: 1/12/2001 1:17 AM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters Hello Jay, This is a very cool design choice that I think I would like to try sometime. Thanks for the great info on some great amps(The Dr. Z's are some of the most innovative out there). Rock On! Jason C. Arthur --------------------------------------------- From: anonymous Date: 1/12/2001 1:34 AM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters When he was first considering using those, he was on a dial-up BBS called Amps n More that I hosted and had members such as Z, Speed Racer, Mark Baier, and about 10 other guys. There are several names for the network. I hadn't ever heard it called a conjunctive filter, but have seen references to Zoebel network, corrective filter, and conjugate load, which is my favorite. Because.. that's what it is. It tries to present the conjugate (opposite sign) load to the tube to smooth out the signal and machinations in the plate circuit of a power amp. It's a great way to clean up an output stage and adjust the frequency response. It can also quench some of the Ldi/dt and allow the output bottles to run a little riskier. ted --------------------------------------------- From: SpeedRacer Date: 1/12/2001 2:17 AM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters ah, the good ol' days. ;) These filters are also a great way to tighten up an amp with a less than stellar OT (like my old Gibson GA20 had.. ) No, this is *not* why Z uses them.. !:) (he designs his own trannies, and does an amazing job of that IMHO) It's just one more use for them. I was able to tweak the super mushy stage into a pretty good imitation of a good output stage ;). I think I used a 10K resistor (OT was 8Kp-p) with a .002uF 1kV disc cap across the primary. This would probably work nicely in a Princeton... --------------------------------------------- From: anonymous Date: 1/12/2001 2:38 AM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters is this the same as the resistor cap across the primary of the fender Pro Jr. --------------------------------------------- From: SpeedRacer Date: 1/12/2001 12:15 PM Subject: Re: Pro Jr "is this the same as the resistor cap across the primary of the fender Pro Jr." Yes, same basic idea. --------------------------------------------- From: DR.Z (drz@drzamps.com) Date: 1/12/2001 9:49 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters Anonymous, My 18 watt head predates the Pro Jr. by about 3 years. But like I stated the idea was sponded from the RCA manual. --------------------------------------------- From: Jason (j1c1a1@aol.com) Date: 1/12/2001 2:46 AM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters Speedracer, Seems like you've been around the block a few times. Will this mod affect tone/feel in a negative way? Is this Output topology something used to fix a problem that should have been taken care of elsewhere in the design? Thanks! Jason C. Arthur --------------------------------------------- From: SpeedRacer Date: 1/12/2001 12:21 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters "Seems like you've been around the block a few times." ..it's not the years, it's the miles. ;) "Will this mod affect tone/feel in a negative way?" IME, no. It made my amp a whole lot better actually. It can be argued that it's a band-aid, but that really depends IMHO on how and why it's in use. If it's taking a great amp one level higher, I don't think it's a bad thing. It is also capable of taking a poor amp into good territory.. (if the output stage is a problem, which is often is in cheapo amps) In the old RCA texts I've read, it seems to be presented as a way to get better response out of cheap output stages in table radios etc where you might typically have a 6V6 running SE or something. A good OT was expensive even way back when, so if a cheap RC network could kluge you some performance, why not. Z has taken the idea into some new areas IMHO, which is really cool. It's a fun tweak to play around with, just try lots of different values of caps & resistors and hear the differences. --------------------------------------------- From: JaySG Date: 1/12/2001 9:56 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters Speed, The RCA text I typed in seemed to be saying that it was suitable when no NFB was being used. Is that right? The Z interview seems to indicate that he's doing more than just a resistor and a cap. Is that consistent with what you're saying? It seems like you could put in some bandpass or bandgap shaping, more than just trying to flatten the response. --------------------------------------------- From: Mike B (mmbb@frontiernet.net) Date: 1/12/2001 2:29 AM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters The following link from Randall's site provides some more info on this circuit: http://www.aikenamps.com/zeroz.pdf Mike B --------------------------------------------- From: CKP (ckenp@aol.com) Date: 1/12/2001 1:48 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters I am just wondering. I have seen an RC network on the power section of a leslie cab. This network on the 6550's was designed some reason but not sure. Is this a different filter then what is being talked about ? I have run across several modded amps where someone has been using the same RC network from the leslie power amp design in guitar amps. The results have been an nice smooth and even response in the tone. Any comments ???? --------------------------------------------- From: Scott Swartz (nnswartz@inlink.com) Date: 1/12/2001 4:08 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters Hifi speakers will often use a Zobel network across the midrange and/or tweeter. The Zobel could be put across the guitar speaker itself, but the cap value would be correspondingly larger. There is a design section on this in the Loudspeaker Design Cookbook, for those interested, I'm going to reread it for grins. Ted Weber, if you're reading this, why don't you just design a constant impedance speaker and we could forget this whole thing :). --------------------------------------------- From: Ken Gilbert Date: 1/12/2001 4:15 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters ted weber, if you're reading this, why don't you just design a HIGH impedance speaker (say 2k) so we could throw out our OPTs! kg --------------------------------------------- From: Gil Ayan (ayan@earthlink.net) Date: 1/12/2001 5:20 PM Subject: Re: Tonequest Dr. Z Interview -- Conjunctive Filters "ted weber, if you're reading this, why don't you just design a HIGH impedance speaker (say 2k) so we could throw out our OPTs! kg" That would save a little more, no doubt, but I don't believe I'd be comfortable with my speaker wires at 500V. It would make open back cabinets weapons of mass destruction... :) Gil --------------------------------------------- [end of file]