The low voltage supply for +/-15V in the Blues Deluxe and also the Hot Rod Deluxe is a disaster waiting to happen. It is extremely common for these amps to fail in either the zeners, the resistors feeding the zeners, the filter caps before/after the zeners, and/or the rectifiers feeding the whole mess.
Perhaps the most common failure is that the resistors feeding the zeners get so hot that they either melt the solder off their leads and unsolder themselves on the spot. This can happen because of an overheated and shorted zener, or any overload on the circuits they feed. This is probably also the worst failure, because the resistors can also char the PCB material under them so that the PCB is permanently damaged in that spot.
The best thing to do is to substitute a pair of three-terminal regulators for the resistor/zener combination. This permanently fixes the problems by converting it into a current- and thermally-limited regulated supply. This is, unfortunately, a job for the professional repair tech.
I can only guess that the Fender designer or, more likely, the MBA in charge of making money on that design, went with saving $0.20 on parts by going to a less-reliable design. The reasoning goes like this "if we put in the cheaper parts, we save the parts cost on every amp. Out of that money, we have to pay for the few amps that fail within the warranty period. If the number that fail in the warranty period is lower than the parts savings, then I get my next performance bonus. And I'll probably be moved to some other area before the amps start to faily in the field and give us a bad name ... kewl..."
Perhaps the most common failure is that the resistors feeding the zeners get so hot that they either melt the solder off their leads and unsolder themselves on the spot. This can happen because of an overheated and shorted zener, or any overload on the circuits they feed. This is probably also the worst failure, because the resistors can also char the PCB material under them so that the PCB is permanently damaged in that spot.
The best thing to do is to substitute a pair of three-terminal regulators for the resistor/zener combination. This permanently fixes the problems by converting it into a current- and thermally-limited regulated supply. This is, unfortunately, a job for the professional repair tech.
I can only guess that the Fender designer or, more likely, the MBA in charge of making money on that design, went with saving $0.20 on parts by going to a less-reliable design. The reasoning goes like this "if we put in the cheaper parts, we save the parts cost on every amp. Out of that money, we have to pay for the few amps that fail within the warranty period. If the number that fail in the warranty period is lower than the parts savings, then I get my next performance bonus. And I'll probably be moved to some other area before the amps start to faily in the field and give us a bad name ... kewl..."
Comment