Something is up. The bass channel is fine but low volume. I would say 1/4 volume. The Guitar channel is the problem. You can increase the volume ever so slightly and the bias changes into relating and mad occilation occurs. I'm thinking I have a bad cap passing DC. Any ideas just off the top of your head. My voltages are all right on the money but I just have a low volume bass channel and bad lead channel. Any help would be appreciated.
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Need help on Bassman AB165
Collapse
X
-
yep DC on a coupling cap is a possible cause of volume drop. Lift the 'tail' end of the suspect cap and measure it for DC.Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)
"I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo
-
Ok, this one has me chasing my tail. The amp just is basically an oscilating redplating Bassman at the moment. I have everything wired to spec and still can't figure it out. The volume controls on the Normal channel actually change the bias. I've replaced pots tested "most" coupling caps and all voltages on tubes are good. Anyone got a shot in the dark on this one?
This is a home build with MM trannies and all good parts. Never had this problem before on a build. All "usually" seems to go well. I think I just may have a brand new bad component.
Comment
-
I have no idea, other than it is a shield to be grounded. I would ask MM about it.
WIndings on transformers always have a "start " end and a "finish " end - often marked on schematics by a black dot. It is up to the builder to know the phase relationship of his output NFB and the rest of his circuitry. Or 50/50 chance by guessing.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
Comment