a friend asked me to look at his cyber twin. power comes on but there's no sound. i checked the speakers, they're fine.
i have the chasis removed and the speaker wires hooked up to an external speaker cab. when i look inside the amp i see that obviously the mains fuse is fine because the amp is powering up, but i notice two blown fuses on the board (F2 and F3, both T1A 250v). everything else seems to work , so i figured these fuses were the problem. i was in kind of a rush, so i decided it would be ok if i just jumpered the blown fuses w/ a thin strand of wire just so i could i confirm if the amp would make sound after that. the plan was to turn the amp on strum the guitar a couple of times and turn it off. if the amp made sound, i would go buy the appropriate fuses, install and be done.
anyway...this was a display of lack of sleep leading to poor judgement. so within seconds of turning the amp on w/ the now jumpered fuses, a "pfft" of smoke appears and i realize i just zapped a voltage regulator. yeah, i know...i should've put the correct fuses in there instead of making more problems for myself. oh, and the amp still didn't make any sound.
i've read that voltage regulators are pretty robust and the only way to really destroy one is to reverse the polarity to the input. obviously, i didn't do that by replacing jumpering a fuse...is it likely the regulator is still ok? it was warm to the touch after my experiment, but that's normal for feeding it too much voltage. (the regulator in question is a 7915, it is labeled U32 on the board.)
so now...that leads me to the transformer. the only thing before those fuses
is the tranny. i've got actual fuses in there now, and i've powered the amp up w/ no ill effects so far. however, i still have no sound. and that voltage regulator gets very warm to the touch. i feel like if i left the amp on for another couple of seconds i may have got another "pfft" of smoke from the regulator.
i have to check out the diodes in the rectifier after the fuses, perhaps they're messed up and feeding the regulator AC instead of DC? i don't know...any suggestions for me?
i have the chasis removed and the speaker wires hooked up to an external speaker cab. when i look inside the amp i see that obviously the mains fuse is fine because the amp is powering up, but i notice two blown fuses on the board (F2 and F3, both T1A 250v). everything else seems to work , so i figured these fuses were the problem. i was in kind of a rush, so i decided it would be ok if i just jumpered the blown fuses w/ a thin strand of wire just so i could i confirm if the amp would make sound after that. the plan was to turn the amp on strum the guitar a couple of times and turn it off. if the amp made sound, i would go buy the appropriate fuses, install and be done.
anyway...this was a display of lack of sleep leading to poor judgement. so within seconds of turning the amp on w/ the now jumpered fuses, a "pfft" of smoke appears and i realize i just zapped a voltage regulator. yeah, i know...i should've put the correct fuses in there instead of making more problems for myself. oh, and the amp still didn't make any sound.
i've read that voltage regulators are pretty robust and the only way to really destroy one is to reverse the polarity to the input. obviously, i didn't do that by replacing jumpering a fuse...is it likely the regulator is still ok? it was warm to the touch after my experiment, but that's normal for feeding it too much voltage. (the regulator in question is a 7915, it is labeled U32 on the board.)
so now...that leads me to the transformer. the only thing before those fuses
is the tranny. i've got actual fuses in there now, and i've powered the amp up w/ no ill effects so far. however, i still have no sound. and that voltage regulator gets very warm to the touch. i feel like if i left the amp on for another couple of seconds i may have got another "pfft" of smoke from the regulator.
i have to check out the diodes in the rectifier after the fuses, perhaps they're messed up and feeding the regulator AC instead of DC? i don't know...any suggestions for me?
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