Detailed, in focus photos of guts of those amps would be helpful.roberto wrote:Thank you Mario.
VacuumVoodoo, have you tried to substitute grid resistors?
Have you seen all infos I wrote?
I'd like to suggest you leave 2.2k in place and experiment by adding a capacitor directly between grid and ground. Try something like 100pF.
I use anti parasitic resistors on power tubes for their intended purpose: to prevent HF oscillation and limit grid current when overdriven.
In some cases, during prototyping or repairing/servicing other amps than mine, a small change in component value in those, as well as some other, positions would result in change in sound that could not reasonably be attributed to the component in question. In all of these instances the underlying primary cause was parasitic feedback due to, sloppy wiring, especially re signal leads to power tubes control grids, OT cables running too close to low level signals etc. Once sensitive signal routes got replaced with shielded cabling and parasitic coupling neutralized everything behaved as intended.
Shielding can perform double duty: either prevent interference to enter sensitive areas or prevent it from escaping its source.
Example of the latter: shielded cabling on output transformer solved an oscillation problem where those leads had to go close to input circuit on the board.
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