Hi everyone,
Looking for some help on a 1967 Super Reverb. So far, I’ve replaced all the electrolytic caps with the correct values, including bypass caps. Checked all resistor and cap values (including dropping resistors ) and measured for leakage. Replaced as needed. Overall, the amp seems to be running OK.
My question is about the B+. I’m running a 116 VAC line supply, in order to achieve 6.3 VAC on the heaters. Measuring the secondary of the PT, I’m getting 350 VAC on pins 4 and 6 of the GZ34. Close to what the original schematic indicates.
When the amp is in standby, I’m measuring a B+ of 475VDC at the rectifier. When I switch out of standby, the B+ drops 35 to 40 V.
I understand that a drop is to be expected once the amp is pulling current. However, this seems to be a bit more than I am used to seeing. This even happens when the tubes are biased colder at 40-50% disapation (I’ve also tried changing entire sets of tubes, including the rectifier, with no effect).
I understand that the real world voltages will not align perfectly with the original schematic. But this seems off to me. By the time I get the output tubes up to 60% dissipation, the voltage drop when hswitching out of standby increases to 40-50V, leaving me around 420v on the plates.
Assuming this voltage drop is more than I should be seeing, any suggestions I want to check next? The filter caps are new, but maybe one is bad? Maybe a dropping resistor is changing value when voltage is applied? Power transformer, choke, or output, transformer issue?
I’ve included some of my voltages below in case it helps. Really appreciate anyone’s input. Thanks very much!
Looking for some help on a 1967 Super Reverb. So far, I’ve replaced all the electrolytic caps with the correct values, including bypass caps. Checked all resistor and cap values (including dropping resistors ) and measured for leakage. Replaced as needed. Overall, the amp seems to be running OK.
My question is about the B+. I’m running a 116 VAC line supply, in order to achieve 6.3 VAC on the heaters. Measuring the secondary of the PT, I’m getting 350 VAC on pins 4 and 6 of the GZ34. Close to what the original schematic indicates.
When the amp is in standby, I’m measuring a B+ of 475VDC at the rectifier. When I switch out of standby, the B+ drops 35 to 40 V.
I understand that a drop is to be expected once the amp is pulling current. However, this seems to be a bit more than I am used to seeing. This even happens when the tubes are biased colder at 40-50% disapation (I’ve also tried changing entire sets of tubes, including the rectifier, with no effect).
I understand that the real world voltages will not align perfectly with the original schematic. But this seems off to me. By the time I get the output tubes up to 60% dissipation, the voltage drop when hswitching out of standby increases to 40-50V, leaving me around 420v on the plates.
Assuming this voltage drop is more than I should be seeing, any suggestions I want to check next? The filter caps are new, but maybe one is bad? Maybe a dropping resistor is changing value when voltage is applied? Power transformer, choke, or output, transformer issue?
I’ve included some of my voltages below in case it helps. Really appreciate anyone’s input. Thanks very much!
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