Hello all - long time no see!
I was helping a friend today and it was very frustrating. He has a Univox 1221 head which seems like a pretty decent amp, and his is exhibiting a problem which I was unable to fix. The schematic is here -
http://www.prowessamplifiers.com/sch...univox1221.pdf
Or see attached.
univox1221.pdf
The tube at the bottom left is the tremolo oscillator. As I understand the circuit, the trem oscillator sends a varying voltage into the grid of the 12AU7 which is biased off the negative bias supply to be a few volts below ground (measured -1.6.) When the oscillator swings positive, the 12AU7 turns on and sinks the dry signal path to ground. When the trem oscillator swings negative, the 12AU7 turns off and the dry signal path passes unchanged.
So far so good? I'm not completely sure but that's what I believe the principle of operation is. Chime in if I'm wrong, please!
In my friend's amp, the trem oscillator won't oscillate. As a result, when the trem intensity control is turned up, the signal is weakened but doesn't vary.
We hunted for blown caps, miswiring, and we replaced a couple of caps that seemed ugly-looking. etc. Swapped tubes, pots, etc. I checked the parts I could check in-circuit and everything was right at spec. Nothing improved with any of our changes.
My next idea would be to pull the caps around the oscillator section and measure them for drift. Anybody have any better ideas, or specific experience with this problem?
Thanks,
-j (tubegeek)
I was helping a friend today and it was very frustrating. He has a Univox 1221 head which seems like a pretty decent amp, and his is exhibiting a problem which I was unable to fix. The schematic is here -
http://www.prowessamplifiers.com/sch...univox1221.pdf
Or see attached.
univox1221.pdf
The tube at the bottom left is the tremolo oscillator. As I understand the circuit, the trem oscillator sends a varying voltage into the grid of the 12AU7 which is biased off the negative bias supply to be a few volts below ground (measured -1.6.) When the oscillator swings positive, the 12AU7 turns on and sinks the dry signal path to ground. When the trem oscillator swings negative, the 12AU7 turns off and the dry signal path passes unchanged.
So far so good? I'm not completely sure but that's what I believe the principle of operation is. Chime in if I'm wrong, please!
In my friend's amp, the trem oscillator won't oscillate. As a result, when the trem intensity control is turned up, the signal is weakened but doesn't vary.
We hunted for blown caps, miswiring, and we replaced a couple of caps that seemed ugly-looking. etc. Swapped tubes, pots, etc. I checked the parts I could check in-circuit and everything was right at spec. Nothing improved with any of our changes.
My next idea would be to pull the caps around the oscillator section and measure them for drift. Anybody have any better ideas, or specific experience with this problem?
Thanks,
-j (tubegeek)
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