Hey y'all-
Fixes a Sunn Concert bass for a dude a while back, worked great for about a week until it bit the dust again.
The first time it was on the bench, I replaced all the 2n3055's, a 24ohm resistor (r133 I think??), and set the bias to just above minimum as I don't have a scope.
Worked fine, sent it home with him, comes back a few sessions later with 3 burned out 24 ohm carbon comps and 4 burned out 2n3055 on either side of the rail. Replaced the 2n3055's and the resistors with fat metal oxides, and it's running well again, but I could not find a definite cause of failure so I'm hesitant to give it back yet.
My first thought was that it was biased too hot, and perhaps I had the pot the wrong way. Can anyone give advice on how to bias to safe levels WITHOUT an oscilloscope?
And secondly, is there maybe some other issue I should be looking at that could cause failure over a few practices?? Thanks!
Fixes a Sunn Concert bass for a dude a while back, worked great for about a week until it bit the dust again.
The first time it was on the bench, I replaced all the 2n3055's, a 24ohm resistor (r133 I think??), and set the bias to just above minimum as I don't have a scope.
Worked fine, sent it home with him, comes back a few sessions later with 3 burned out 24 ohm carbon comps and 4 burned out 2n3055 on either side of the rail. Replaced the 2n3055's and the resistors with fat metal oxides, and it's running well again, but I could not find a definite cause of failure so I'm hesitant to give it back yet.
My first thought was that it was biased too hot, and perhaps I had the pot the wrong way. Can anyone give advice on how to bias to safe levels WITHOUT an oscilloscope?
And secondly, is there maybe some other issue I should be looking at that could cause failure over a few practices?? Thanks!
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