Marshall JCM600. I've got a loud hum that almost completely vanishes when I touch the chassis. Seems like a ground issue, but how do I find it? In case it helps, here are the events that started this problem.
[1] Amp working wonderfully. Got a new set of SED EL34s and wanted to install them and set the bias.
[2] Decided to "roll my own" bias probe, from an old EL34 base and an octal socket, with a 1ohm 2W resister on pin 8 (cathode).
[3] A misplaced blob of solder appears to have shorted 2 of the pins (it looks like #1 and #2).
[4] Turned on the amp... Pow! R101 (100k) burnt to a crisp and F102 (0.5A) blew.
[5] Subsequent hours spent kicking self in ass.
[6] I replaced the resistor and the fuse. The amp fires up, but the hum is horrible.
Touching the chassis reduces the hum, which makes me think its probably a grounding issue. What else might have gotten damaged by my botched bias probe?
Any suggestions on what else I may have damaged and how to check?
[1] Amp working wonderfully. Got a new set of SED EL34s and wanted to install them and set the bias.
[2] Decided to "roll my own" bias probe, from an old EL34 base and an octal socket, with a 1ohm 2W resister on pin 8 (cathode).
[3] A misplaced blob of solder appears to have shorted 2 of the pins (it looks like #1 and #2).
[4] Turned on the amp... Pow! R101 (100k) burnt to a crisp and F102 (0.5A) blew.
[5] Subsequent hours spent kicking self in ass.
[6] I replaced the resistor and the fuse. The amp fires up, but the hum is horrible.
Touching the chassis reduces the hum, which makes me think its probably a grounding issue. What else might have gotten damaged by my botched bias probe?
Any suggestions on what else I may have damaged and how to check?
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