Here's
how it looks. I cut the leads between C14/15 (which are taped together
in the original layout) and the two resistors; I soldered the shortened
leads from the caps to a piece of terminal strip. The pot goes in
the second input hole for CH2 (remove the existing jack). Ground the
pot (pin 3) to the ground pin on the other input jack. I mounted the
two new caps on another piece of terminal strip. Since I used stiff
solid core wire, the whole thing stays put fairly well. You could
also drill a hole in the fiberboard running down the center of the
chassis and screw the terminal strip down. You may have to re-route
some other wires to make room if you use big caps like I did. |
(Click
on the image for a full size blow up.)
How
Does It Sound? Great. It's nice to be able to max the gain on
the two channels, and jumper them with the MV turned down - great
blues tone at bedroom volumes!
Caveat:
Because of the way the reverb return is mixed on the 1484, the reverb
seems to be less audible when the master volume is turned down.
Since I'm not a fan of the 1484's 'verb this didn't bother me.
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