The EQ inductors like to pick up hum fields. If e.g. you routed a power supply wire close to one of the inductors, this could be your problem.
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Mesa Boogie F-30 Hum Problem After Repair
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***Sigh*** The amp from hell. I pulled the board, got rid of the jumpers. While I was at it I took a soldering iron to the bottom of the board and reflowed pretty much the whole thing. Put it all back together again. The hum I was trying to get rid of appears to be taken take care of. But now there is a louder hum, seems to start around V4. Also periodic crackling sound is back that I thought I had been resolved before I started this thread. Tried swapping out the 100K and 82K plate resistors at V4 and the 0.047 coupling caps, no change. I'm getting close to giving up on it and moving on to the other amps I have in the queue..
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Originally posted by bobloblaws View PostBut now there is a louder hum, seems to start around V4.
Not sure if this helps.
EDIT: Since the crackle was gone and is now back tells me it's more likely a physical contact problem than a component problem. Have you cleaned all the contacts? When you resoldered did you touch up the tube pin joints? These are common failure areas because players sometimes plug and unplug tubes repeatedly while "tube rolling" and Mesa's PCB mounted sockets can make that a durability issue.Last edited by Chuck H; 09-30-2024, 03:58 AM."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 Chuck H View Post
That the hum is louder is telling. Because Helmholtz called it out. There may have been multiple hum sources and I suspect they were out of phase so somewhat cancelling. You removed one and now the hum is louder. I'll bet is you scope it again that dip in the hum signal will be gone. You wouldn't have detected the V4 hum because the one you corrected was earlier in the circuit.
Not sure if this helps.
EDIT: Since the crackle was gone and is now back tells me it's more likely a physical contact problem than a component problem. Have you cleaned all the contacts" When you resoldered did you touch up the tube pin joints? These are common failure areas because players sometimes plug and unplug tubes repeatedly while "tube rolling" and Mesa's PCB mounted sockets can make that a durability issue.
Come to think of it, the term cracking might not be the best description. A little more subtle, like random blasts of white noise with a crispy component at times?Last edited by bobloblaws; 09-29-2024, 10:58 PM.
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Originally posted by bobloblaws View Post...Come to think of it, the term cracking might not be the best description. A little more subtle, like random blasts of white noise with a crispy component at times?
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Originally posted by Tom Phillips View PostIs the noise intermittent or does it occur fairly often when the amp is just sitting on the bench undisturbed?
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Bobloblaws,
The scope traces are interesting but hard to relate to the noises you are describing. Your first post in this thread seems to indicate that you have audio signal tracing capability. Is that true? That's what I often use in these circumstances. I was recently successful in tracing some really annoying noise to an individual capacitor. The signal tracer indicated a nice quiet spot at the input side of the coupling cap and, on the other side of the cap, I could hear the exact noise as was present at the output of the amp. There was actually no "signal tracing" because I could just hunt for the objectionable background noise. Changing one cap fixed the noisy amp.
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Originally posted by Tom Phillips View PostBobloblaws,
The scope traces are interesting but hard to relate to the noises you are describing. Your first post in this thread seems to indicate that you have audio signal tracing capability. Is that true? That's what I often use in these circumstances. I was recently successful in tracing some really annoying noise to an individual capacitor. The signal tracer indicated a nice quiet spot at the input side of the coupling cap and, on the other side of the cap, I could hear the exact noise as was present at the output of the amp. There was actually no "signal tracing" because I could just hunt for the objectionable background noise. Changing one cap fixed the noisy amp.
Bear in mind the traces I just posted are of the loud hum, not the sporadic noises.
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This may be coincidental, but glitchy clicky popping noises can be caused by oscillation, as can hum. However, that hum should be 120Hz, which I don't think you have.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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