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Author Topic:  reverb
ken collins

 

From:
Oklahoma City, OK.
Post  Posted 12 Jan 2024 8:42 am    
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I have Nashville head in separate cabinet. Not tall. How can you insulate reverb when close to transformer? Thanks, Ken
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Donny Hinson

 

From:
Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
Post  Posted 12 Jan 2024 10:15 am    
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Nothing beats space, but one easy thing to do is to orient the tank so the input is farther away from the transformer. Another thing that might help some is to put a piece of steel sheet between the transformer and the tank. (A piece of annealed Mu metal would be far more effective, but that might cost you $40-$50.)
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ken collins

 

From:
Oklahoma City, OK.
Post  Posted 12 Jan 2024 12:04 pm     reverb
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Thanks. Should help. I meant isolate instead of insulate.
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J Fletcher

 

From:
London,Ont,Canada
Post  Posted 13 Jan 2024 11:01 am    
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Try the tank in different positions and listen to see if one place is the quietest . You could locate the tank in the speaker cabinet though you would need a longer reverb cable and a provision to connect and disconnect easily . I have done this using a 3 pin xlr microphone plug .
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ken collins

 

From:
Oklahoma City, OK.
Post  Posted 13 Jan 2024 2:01 pm     reverb
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Thanks J. Fletcher. Thats how it is now. Aquired a short reverb and wanted to locate it in the head cabinet.
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Pat Chong

 

From:
New Mexico, USA
Post  Posted 18 Jan 2024 1:47 pm    
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Hi Ken,

I was thinking about this too, if I came across that problem with separating amp & speaker. Maybe a metal shield around the transformer or between the transformer and the reverb tank, may help, but the metal shield HAS to be a magnetic metal to help guide the magnetic field away from the tank...... That would be a cheap method to try.

.......Pat
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Jerry Overstreet


From:
Louisville Ky
Post  Posted 18 Jan 2024 2:00 pm    
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FWIW, I've built a few NV400 head cabinets. What I have found is before you bolt down the rev pan, turn the reverb control full clockwise and carefully position the tank to where it has the least hum. I've nearly always been able to mitigate the hum, if not completely, to an acceptable level to where it isn't noticeable when playing.

Be sure it is oriented the same way as in the original amp cabinet. If it's reversed end for end it will hum like all get out.
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