One of my steady clients sent back the latest Ampeg SVT-CL-Heritage Bass Amp this past week, after I had worked on it, finding it hadn't yet been set up and spent the time to solidify it for years of service as I've done for our large supply of those amps, as well as their's. It came back with the complaint of it having low output power.
I pulled up my service notes on what I measured on it's recent visit to the shop and powered it up to give a listen. I think the last time I had actually measured steady state power on an SVT was an SVT-VR, setting the Balance pot on the rear panel. I normally don't bother measuring output power on these, they having very healthy power supplies and either KT88's or 6550's (being what is supplied from Ampeg). This had a matched set of J/J 6550's in it. When I measured the power output at 200Hz driving 4 ohm dummy load (4 ohm/500W Dales), it was clipping at 206W out. Hello! I then connected it to the speaker (Ampeg BXT115HL4 15" woofer/tweeter) and fired up my B & K 2130 SPL Meter/Freq Analyzer at my desk. 20 ft from the speaker, I was reading an average of 104dB SPL with periodic peak clipping using burst pink noise. Meter readings driving the speaker at those peaks was around 31V RMS, lower than the nominal spec'd 34.6V RMS @ 4 ohms. The burst Pink noise has plenty of LF power, with bass turned up a bit on the preamp. I always have the amp under test powered thru either my Magtrol 4614 100A Power Analyzer or a Valhalla 2101 20A Power Analyzer and variac, maintained at nominal 120VAC. Current/wattage under output power test was 5.8A/580W @ 120VAC typical.
I tried increasing the idle cathode current readings with the bias pots from 23mA/tube to 25mA/tube, which got me a bit higher. 228W steady state dummy load. I replaced the driver tubes ECC82/12AU7's and the front end input tube ECC83S, rebiased, and got a little higher. Then swapped out the power tubes with a new set of 6550's, biased those up at 23mA/tube, and got 261W at clipping THD less than 5%.
I then put up the client's SVT-VR, repeated the same measurements, and it too wasn't anywhere close to 300W. Ampeg's spec calls out 300W Min @ <5% THD.
Power supply voltages for the power tube plate/screens was nominal 660VDC Plate, 365V Screen, 380VDC driver stage plates. I didn't measure voltages under drive conditions, not having any previous reference data for comparison.
So, ok. I agree. Output power IS low. I didn't have any KT88's here in the shop to swap in to see if there was any difference there. IF this IS the nominal output power on these amps, then we have around 20 of them on hand, and the client has at least half that or more. I've never heard any complaints on these amps until now. And assuming KT88's won't offer any further increase in power, that's then pointing to the power supply filter caps as well as the power transformer. Getting into expensive territory if the client is going to be insistent on having their rated power spec met.
Just as a side note, I had just completed repairing one of the client's Eden WT800's, which had both power amp's with shorted power xstrs. Only one xstr shorted on each module, restored order, and later checked output level on the SPL meter driving the Ampeg 15" bass bin in the shop, again at 20ft. I was reading 108dB SPL with burst pink noise. Granted, that amp in bridge mono IS producing more power out than the SVT-CL or -VR, but I was somewhat taken back seeing 104dB SPL nominal and hearing the SVT output clipping reaching a bit above 30V RMS on the meter feeding the scope (Amber 3501a Audio Analyzer).
The client's delivery man today brought me another SVT-CL that's now going into Protect, so I did pass along my findings on this 'low power' complaint on a typical SVT, a brand new one added to their collection.
I'll have a look at the Hiwatt DR201 that just came in from Lon Cohen later this week, it being a 200W 4-KT88 bass amp. And I have the one I built for myself here as well for comparison.
I pulled up my service notes on what I measured on it's recent visit to the shop and powered it up to give a listen. I think the last time I had actually measured steady state power on an SVT was an SVT-VR, setting the Balance pot on the rear panel. I normally don't bother measuring output power on these, they having very healthy power supplies and either KT88's or 6550's (being what is supplied from Ampeg). This had a matched set of J/J 6550's in it. When I measured the power output at 200Hz driving 4 ohm dummy load (4 ohm/500W Dales), it was clipping at 206W out. Hello! I then connected it to the speaker (Ampeg BXT115HL4 15" woofer/tweeter) and fired up my B & K 2130 SPL Meter/Freq Analyzer at my desk. 20 ft from the speaker, I was reading an average of 104dB SPL with periodic peak clipping using burst pink noise. Meter readings driving the speaker at those peaks was around 31V RMS, lower than the nominal spec'd 34.6V RMS @ 4 ohms. The burst Pink noise has plenty of LF power, with bass turned up a bit on the preamp. I always have the amp under test powered thru either my Magtrol 4614 100A Power Analyzer or a Valhalla 2101 20A Power Analyzer and variac, maintained at nominal 120VAC. Current/wattage under output power test was 5.8A/580W @ 120VAC typical.
I tried increasing the idle cathode current readings with the bias pots from 23mA/tube to 25mA/tube, which got me a bit higher. 228W steady state dummy load. I replaced the driver tubes ECC82/12AU7's and the front end input tube ECC83S, rebiased, and got a little higher. Then swapped out the power tubes with a new set of 6550's, biased those up at 23mA/tube, and got 261W at clipping THD less than 5%.
I then put up the client's SVT-VR, repeated the same measurements, and it too wasn't anywhere close to 300W. Ampeg's spec calls out 300W Min @ <5% THD.
Power supply voltages for the power tube plate/screens was nominal 660VDC Plate, 365V Screen, 380VDC driver stage plates. I didn't measure voltages under drive conditions, not having any previous reference data for comparison.
So, ok. I agree. Output power IS low. I didn't have any KT88's here in the shop to swap in to see if there was any difference there. IF this IS the nominal output power on these amps, then we have around 20 of them on hand, and the client has at least half that or more. I've never heard any complaints on these amps until now. And assuming KT88's won't offer any further increase in power, that's then pointing to the power supply filter caps as well as the power transformer. Getting into expensive territory if the client is going to be insistent on having their rated power spec met.
Just as a side note, I had just completed repairing one of the client's Eden WT800's, which had both power amp's with shorted power xstrs. Only one xstr shorted on each module, restored order, and later checked output level on the SPL meter driving the Ampeg 15" bass bin in the shop, again at 20ft. I was reading 108dB SPL with burst pink noise. Granted, that amp in bridge mono IS producing more power out than the SVT-CL or -VR, but I was somewhat taken back seeing 104dB SPL nominal and hearing the SVT output clipping reaching a bit above 30V RMS on the meter feeding the scope (Amber 3501a Audio Analyzer).
The client's delivery man today brought me another SVT-CL that's now going into Protect, so I did pass along my findings on this 'low power' complaint on a typical SVT, a brand new one added to their collection.
I'll have a look at the Hiwatt DR201 that just came in from Lon Cohen later this week, it being a 200W 4-KT88 bass amp. And I have the one I built for myself here as well for comparison.
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