I figured that if any site might ave some insite, it woudl be this one, so here it goes: Okay, last week, my (one month old) amp was making some kind of crackling sound (I forget which channel), and then the rectifier tube went (I called the place where I bought it, and they suggested it might be the rectifier tube, try that first, and then look at the power tubes). I went to the local shop, while they don't carry Boogie tubes, they had a Sovtek, so I brought that home, fired up the amp, and we're in business.
The next day I went to another store that had Boogie rectifier tubes for the LSS, bought one (warranty issue using non-Boogie tubes in Boogie amps, but hey, the tubes are warrantied for 6 months, so that's okay with me), went home and plugged it in. All's good. So far. Played off and on for the next couple of days, then same thing, crackling. I turned the amp off, consulted the manual. Several things were mentioned: faulty power tube, possible rectifier tube, it also said to watch out for miniature lightening storms in the rectifier and other tubes. So I flipped the amp around, turned on the power supply, and shazzam! Lightening in a bottle! In the rectifier tube. That's the 2nd Boogie tube, and a new one to boot. Before I had a chance to shut it off the fuse blew. sh!t!
So, off to The Source, picked up the right fuse, got home installed new, and everything is okay. Today, as I'm playing away, experimenting with the different wattage settings, I had it on the 30 watt setting, and start to hear crackling again. Blew another fuse. Put in one more, blew it too.
So, I called Boogie. As useless at tits on a bull. So I called the repair palce at Steve's Music (where I bought it). Matt had some interesting ideas. As he can't see it until Monday, he suggested this: go buy more fuses, before I install one, remove the power and rectifier tubes, then install the fuse and turn on the amp, in standby, wait, and then turn standby to on. If the fuse doesn't blow, that narrows things down a bit. He then said, to turn the power off and put the spare set of new Boogie power tubes that I have in it. And install the Boogie rectifier. So I did all of that, and within about 3 seconds, there was a lightening storm in the rectifier again. I turned it off immediately, and put the Sovtek recitifier tube in. Still working. What gives? Any ideas? Anyone else have similar issues? Thanks for your time.
The next day I went to another store that had Boogie rectifier tubes for the LSS, bought one (warranty issue using non-Boogie tubes in Boogie amps, but hey, the tubes are warrantied for 6 months, so that's okay with me), went home and plugged it in. All's good. So far. Played off and on for the next couple of days, then same thing, crackling. I turned the amp off, consulted the manual. Several things were mentioned: faulty power tube, possible rectifier tube, it also said to watch out for miniature lightening storms in the rectifier and other tubes. So I flipped the amp around, turned on the power supply, and shazzam! Lightening in a bottle! In the rectifier tube. That's the 2nd Boogie tube, and a new one to boot. Before I had a chance to shut it off the fuse blew. sh!t!
So, off to The Source, picked up the right fuse, got home installed new, and everything is okay. Today, as I'm playing away, experimenting with the different wattage settings, I had it on the 30 watt setting, and start to hear crackling again. Blew another fuse. Put in one more, blew it too.
So, I called Boogie. As useless at tits on a bull. So I called the repair palce at Steve's Music (where I bought it). Matt had some interesting ideas. As he can't see it until Monday, he suggested this: go buy more fuses, before I install one, remove the power and rectifier tubes, then install the fuse and turn on the amp, in standby, wait, and then turn standby to on. If the fuse doesn't blow, that narrows things down a bit. He then said, to turn the power off and put the spare set of new Boogie power tubes that I have in it. And install the Boogie rectifier. So I did all of that, and within about 3 seconds, there was a lightening storm in the rectifier again. I turned it off immediately, and put the Sovtek recitifier tube in. Still working. What gives? Any ideas? Anyone else have similar issues? Thanks for your time.
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