....I'm talking about using it for faultfinding as well as tweaking/modding and building them.
Hi there, new member, 1st post and all that...I've been working on and modding amps for quite a while now, I even built a couple recently (albeit from kits) and up until now I've only been using a DMM to test/faultfind etc, but one of the amps I built appears to have developed a problem with parasitic oscillation and I was wondering if it would be worth investing in an oscilloscope.
I'm pretty sure that a good scope would help with that particular problem, but I'd also like to know if there are any other common Guitar amp/FX pedal problems that are much easier to diagnose if you have a scope.
One other possible use that occured to me was checking for ripple/noise on the output of an amp's rectifier, but I gather that you are supposed to use a differential probe for this...
Hi there, new member, 1st post and all that...I've been working on and modding amps for quite a while now, I even built a couple recently (albeit from kits) and up until now I've only been using a DMM to test/faultfind etc, but one of the amps I built appears to have developed a problem with parasitic oscillation and I was wondering if it would be worth investing in an oscilloscope.
I'm pretty sure that a good scope would help with that particular problem, but I'd also like to know if there are any other common Guitar amp/FX pedal problems that are much easier to diagnose if you have a scope.
One other possible use that occured to me was checking for ripple/noise on the output of an amp's rectifier, but I gather that you are supposed to use a differential probe for this...
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