I think if you play with the cap off and on while varying the tone control settings, you will hear that it has some effect on the tone. Try to think of it this way: in normal mode, which is the way most people use the amp, the cap parallels the bass pot to ground (via the 10K tail resistor). When the pot is set to zero, the cap is shorted out so there is no effect at all.Tonegeek wrote:I did an A/B with the .001 and cannot hear any difference. This is with no Rock/Jazz switch and the Deep switch disabled. I may not have tested with the bass pot in more than one postion, which could make a difference as the pot is turn up.Normster wrote:Crap, I forgot about the .001uF. That would be the reason for leaving it in...unless I get rid of the.001.
When you turn the bass control all the way up, however, while the lower frequencies see the full 500K + 10K path to ground, which allows the "bass content" to travel upwind through the circuit, the higher frequencies present at the input of the bass pot (which will not be the highest of all, since those will favor travelling forward through the treble cap) will see an easier path to ground thanks to the cap and will not travel upwind. The effect? Less " treble."
In between those extreme settings, the effect will be varied. As with all other controls on the Dumble, as opposed to say an old Boogie, where turning the treble knob half a notch could make or break the sound of the amp, the effect is subtle to me.
Cheers,
Gil


