Here
I am ready to toss this old amp as I cant find a schematic anywhere.
Its a Fender Studio Lead amp with a sweet tone but I just keep blowing fuses.
Can anyone help.
Judd
Last edited by Judd; 11-11-2008 at 12:23 AM. Reason: Wrong title
Hey Thank you!
I really cant believe how that just happened.
I am a proud new member
Judd
It is the magic of the internet. You send questions down a series of tubes, and answers appear mysteriously.
Welcome to the place.
[You send questions down a series of tubes, and answers appear mysteriously.]
Or not.... ;(
Well, maybe your tubes need a little more fiber, hmmmm?
<LOL> Perhaps my visualization skill need enhancing. "I see a Boss PS-5 schematic in my hands..."
Or I could just call Roland...
The internet tube that runs through my bookshelf found this:
Thanks for playing Enzo - unfortunately that was a PSM-5 Power Supply. The pedal I own is a PS-5 Super Shifter. Big difference. You wouldn't happen to have a manual for one of those somewhere would you?
RE
NO or I would have posted it. That was as close as my library could come, I was hoping it was similar enough to help, WHat do you expect from internet tubes?
Thank You Enzo for your Fender Studio Lead Diagram.
You are welcome, welcome to our forum.
Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Do you guys know if i can get a footswitch for my Fender Studio Lead? Also, i too am having a problem with my amp. Channel 1 does not work, i just brought it in to get it checked out. I'm not much of a gear head.
Well, if you already took it in, then we will find out what was wrong.
The footswitch appears to be a common two button stomp switch.
Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Sorry to be so dense, but so will pretty much any fender two button footswitch work with the amp? I really am this clueless. Thanks for the help again in advance
Looking at the schematic, the jack is a TRS jack, and the control circuits operate by grounding. SO any two button switch with a TRS plug ought to work. I'd stay away from ones with LEDs unless I knew that wouldn;t get in the way.
Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
I've had two of these now. The first one came to me for repair in the mid '80s after it had fallen on it's face off a truck or something. All the pots had to be replaced, too expensive for the owner to repair, but being a Fender Authorized service rep at the time, I was able to get the pots at cost and fixed it up for myself. It worked great until it was my only amp in 1999, something started sounding distorted in the clean channel. I never could figure it out and tried wholesale replacement of parts, finally figuring the circuit board was cracked somewhere I couldn't find. Sold it at a garage sale for $10, even thought the speaker was fine and the power section of the amp worked fine.
Now in the days of internet and eBay, I bought another one and when I got it, it sounded similar, a minor distortion in the clean channel. After playing it awhile it seems to have gone away, so I'm guessing a capacitor on an amp that hadn't been played in awhile.
But forget the fairytales, the point of this post is the Cabinet for the Studio Lead is exactly the same as the all tube Princeton Reverb II, P/N 019363, Ponderosa Pine with box joint construction (plywood baffle). For any of you who have played newer Fender amps with particle board cabinets, there is a huge difference. Just read about all the posts about the Blues Jr. and look at third party pine cabinets being made for big bucks. So if you can't fix your studio lead, think about selling the Pine cabinet and speaker.
Re: about the footswitch, Enzo is correct, it's just a two button footswitch with a TRS 1/4" plug. You can make one easily with SPST switches. Do not use one with LEDs, the LED on the front amp panel is your indicator, nothing will happen if you put one in with the footswitch unless you power it up with a batttery.
Thank you Enzo for posting the parts list, it was the only way to confirm that the Studio Lead cabinet was the same. It looks the same at the PRII, and is the same size, but it's hard to tell plywood from pine when it's painted black.
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