On the bench is a Shobud SB-15 transistor amp highly prized and used every day by a steel guitar player.
The main problem was fluctuating volume, although he said it also gave shocks when he touched the chassis or used a volume pedal. Unfortunately, he had spliced in a 3-prong cord to the old 2-prong cable and clipped off the tip.
After properly installing a 3-prong cable with the ground on the chassis, the amp sounds fine. The transistors and 2 power supply electrolytics tested good (I assumed the PS caps were gone, but maybe not).
My question is whether the volume issue could be caused by bad grounding from the 2-prong cord.
(Also, a schematic would be nice if anyone has one).
Thanks!!
UPDATE
The owner states that the amp volume fluctuates (usually cuts in half) after about 30 minutes of playing. I only tested it for a few minutes.
The cap cans are two Mallory 4300µ 50VDC 65 surge.
The output transistors are a pair of RCA 40636, which seem to be quite hard to find.
He wanted the caps to be replaced just in case, because the amp is so old.
I'm wondering if lower voltage electrolytics last a lot longer than high voltage ones used in tube amps (and these are just fine).
The main problem was fluctuating volume, although he said it also gave shocks when he touched the chassis or used a volume pedal. Unfortunately, he had spliced in a 3-prong cord to the old 2-prong cable and clipped off the tip.
After properly installing a 3-prong cable with the ground on the chassis, the amp sounds fine. The transistors and 2 power supply electrolytics tested good (I assumed the PS caps were gone, but maybe not).
My question is whether the volume issue could be caused by bad grounding from the 2-prong cord.
(Also, a schematic would be nice if anyone has one).
Thanks!!
UPDATE
The owner states that the amp volume fluctuates (usually cuts in half) after about 30 minutes of playing. I only tested it for a few minutes.
The cap cans are two Mallory 4300µ 50VDC 65 surge.
The output transistors are a pair of RCA 40636, which seem to be quite hard to find.
He wanted the caps to be replaced just in case, because the amp is so old.
I'm wondering if lower voltage electrolytics last a lot longer than high voltage ones used in tube amps (and these are just fine).
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