Ah same voltages tubes in that circuit.
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Unusual ceramic resistor Fender Pro Reverb
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Originally posted by Markorock37 View PostResistor smoked in the 5 min it was on. 4.7kOriginally posted by Markorock37 View PostThe original resistor was cooked as well.Last edited by Tom Phillips; 12-15-2016, 08:05 AM.
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And hard to believe the government would let you drink your water, yet it happened. The thing to do is forget any preconceived ideas. Even if the cap is new, it can still be faulty. or have a tiny solder bead where it doesn;t belong. Unsolder the potentially bad cap and see if it makes the difference. S)mething is dragging down the low end of that 4.7k resistor. There are only so many possible paths to ground. A small number of parts, and then the circuit board and wiring themselves.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Glad I have a well! But yes unfortunately for a lot of people here. Disconnected that cap and still same reading. Resistor gets hot within mere seconds. I'm not seeing DC on any coupling caps in that circuit or evidence of anything touching or shorting. All resistors are within 10%. It's really throwing me for a loop.
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Divide & conquer !
Pull V1, V2 and V4 which are connected to the 4k7 resistor. If The 20u cap is pulled, then the only other connections are the 100k resistors.
If the voltage goes back to normal on the 4k7 resistor, then put the valves back in one at a time & see if one of them pulls the voltage down
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Even if a tube plate shorted directly to ground somehow, the 100k oplate resistors limit the current pretty well. SO power off and what resistance to ground from that point, the left end of 4.7k? The number MAY suggest some circuit element.
Turn off ALL room lights, and look at the amp closely while it heats up that resistor. Is there a tiny blue spark anywhere? Even reflecting out from under the part board? Evidence of an arc.
Got a variac? Dial it back say 20%, still loads down the resistor?
Groud your meter, but instead of probing component leads or solder points, put the hot probe NEAR an eyelet or solder node. Is there any stray voltage on the (supposedly) insulating part board surface?Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Have you quadruple checked your work, twice?
You said the unit was in for a cap job. That implies it was working fine. Resistors and caps in the doghouse were changed. Any chance something is amiss? Or touching the doghouse cover?
Sorry to bring this up, as I'm sure you've looked closely, but the amp was ok before, or did I miss something?Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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The amp came in not working. Customer states it worked before he wheeled it out of the room to do carpet and when he wheeled it back in it came on but no sound. That's when I initially found the voltage problem and also attributed that to old caps. I also noticed that 4.7k was toasty. I always take pics beforehand just to make sure everything goes 100%. I have already checked multiple times and wiring is correct.
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Originally posted by Markorock37 View PostAbout 830 ohms to ground...
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Well this was a tricky one, but it's up and running with proper voltages and bias. The leakage was found between the board and chassis. The best I can figure is a resistor had poked a tiny hole in the bottom layer, maybe not entirely all the way through but enough to leak. I removed the screws holding the board down and read the correct resistance around 34-35k, but as soon as I put the screw back in the middle of the board it started shorting again! I put a nylon washer in between the board and chassis at each screw hole and bam was in business. The amp is working great and sounds good too. Thank you all of you that steered me in the right direction. This one was a doozy!
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