Originally posted by bobloblaws
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Mesa Boogie F-30 Hum Problem After Repair
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I found a thread at https://music-electronics-forum.com/...-tremoverb-hum that discussed a Mesa Hum Fix that turned out, according ti the OP, to be a design flaw. It may not help in your case but can't hurt to read about what other's have experienced.
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Originally posted by bobloblaws View Post.... AC in the -15V supply would be 120Hz, yes?
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Originally posted by x-pro View PostNo. If you look at the formation of the +15 and -15 voltages, you can see that they come from one winding through a single half-period rectifier. The smoothing circuits are two RC circuits - 100 ohms+1000uF. The capacitors are of course large, but they may have lost their rating. Then there will be a background from 60Hz.
I have a a dual rail DC power supply I built as a Covid lockdown project, it's +12/-12. It would be a bit tricky, but I was thinking of disconnecting the -15V supply from the contour EQ section and injecting -12V from my gadget. Do you think that's worth a try?Last edited by bobloblaws; 09-22-2024, 10:35 PM.
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Originally posted by Tom Phillips View PostI found a thread at https://music-electronics-forum.com/...-tremoverb-hum that discussed a Mesa Hum Fix that turned out, according ti the OP, to be a design flaw. It may not help in your case but can't hurt to read about what other's have experienced.
It was a ground loop in the reverb recovery circuit; the stock setup has each channel's master volume, presence, and reverb pots sharing a ground bus. I removed the reverb pots from the bus and grounded them at the grid reference resistor for the post-master triode.
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostDo you have a scope?
Seeing the waveshape of the hum would help to identify the hum source.
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostJust post a pic of the hum at the speaker output. Should be mVs.
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Interestingly there looks to be a 120Hz artifact? I hope Helmholtz or someone else has insight on this and you can source this problem."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Originally posted by bobloblaws View PostFirst I "tuned" the scope by putting 64HZ through the amp from my signal generator and then using the "auto" button on the scope. Turned off the test signal and was left with this:
(I would change the settings to 50mVdiv vertical and 5ms/div for a larger display.)
The hum pattern shows single sided (negative going) peaks, typical for power supply ripple.
Now I would scope the +/- 15V supplies with the scope input in AC coupling.
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Originally posted by Chuck H View PostInterestingly there looks to be a 120Hz artifact? I hope Helmholtz or someone else has insight on this and you can source this problem.
Not sure what it is but the output hum might be composed of 2 different hum signals.
I would ignore the small dips for now.- Own Opinions Only -
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