A bandmate has had fuses blowing in a blackface super for the past few years. On gigs a fuse would blow and he'd put a fuse in and finish the gig no problem. He had a cap job done by someone else about 2 years ago and still the problem persists until it got so bad that it wouldn't hold a fuse. Now I have it. I'm a novice, at amp repair and amp building, been do this for only a bit more than 2 years.
I tapped around alot with chop stick and check voltages. Checked PT with the mentor I'm working with. That measured up fine
He suggested changing paper caps and checking resistors for the appropriate value. Changed alot of everything on the board. Almost a new amp. So I run it for a good long while and played it hard and loud and a fuse blows. Now, I've always suspected the tube sockets, having read this form and others, so I finally change them and put in ceramic octals, all 3, none of the 9 pins. I had checked them all by moving them and tapping all tubes and no apparent problems but put the new octals in anyway.
(BTW, I put in ceramic sockets and as many of you know they are alot stiffer and harder to work the tube in and out. In the process I snapped off the plastic guide at the center of the tube base. Has anyone done this and is it possible to glue it back on[with what?] and will it hold? of course he gets the new one.)
The other problem I came across was that one of the bolts holding the PT to the chassis was stripped and the nut couldn't be tightened down. So not having an exact replacement I bought one from a hardware store that fit and put the cardboard sleeve around it and put it in. However, I'm a bit concerned that the cardboard sleeve was damaged at the top and therefore not covering a 1/4" of the bolt. Could this have an effect on the amp? Damage the PT in the long run?
thanks in advance.
pete
I tapped around alot with chop stick and check voltages. Checked PT with the mentor I'm working with. That measured up fine
He suggested changing paper caps and checking resistors for the appropriate value. Changed alot of everything on the board. Almost a new amp. So I run it for a good long while and played it hard and loud and a fuse blows. Now, I've always suspected the tube sockets, having read this form and others, so I finally change them and put in ceramic octals, all 3, none of the 9 pins. I had checked them all by moving them and tapping all tubes and no apparent problems but put the new octals in anyway.
(BTW, I put in ceramic sockets and as many of you know they are alot stiffer and harder to work the tube in and out. In the process I snapped off the plastic guide at the center of the tube base. Has anyone done this and is it possible to glue it back on[with what?] and will it hold? of course he gets the new one.)
The other problem I came across was that one of the bolts holding the PT to the chassis was stripped and the nut couldn't be tightened down. So not having an exact replacement I bought one from a hardware store that fit and put the cardboard sleeve around it and put it in. However, I'm a bit concerned that the cardboard sleeve was damaged at the top and therefore not covering a 1/4" of the bolt. Could this have an effect on the amp? Damage the PT in the long run?
thanks in advance.
pete
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