Hi all,
I have a Winfield Thomas Elizabeth Reverb head. The amp is clone of a Fender Deluxe (with only 1 channel and a mid control). I pulled the 6V6 tubes in favor of 6L6s and put in a SS rectifier (I was told this was safe by the builder). I biased the amp up and it worked great for about 6 months. Recently it shut down on me at a gig. My first suspicion was bad power tubes, since I didn't see them glowing when it wasn't working (the amp worked intermittently).
So I put in new power tubes, biased it up and everything was great for about 3 hours of playing time. Then it cut out on me, no sound whatsoever. Tubes not glowing. I get home from rehearsal and start doing some voltage readings. I get the tubes glowing and read the plate voltage on pin 3 and its at 875 volts!!! Needless to say the tubes stopped glowing shortly thereafter and I'm afraid to turn it on again.
What could make the plate voltage so high?? Obviously something is very wrong. What can I safely check to determine if this is a transformer issue, filter cap issue, etc?
I figured I could safely pull all the tubes and do some voltage measuring. Even with the tubes pulled I'm measuring over 700 volts on the plate pins. This leads me to believe that I have a bad power transformer (or perhaps output transformer). Would this make sense? I'm kind of a noob on this stuff and really just need a reliable gig amp that I so far lack due to these issues!
Thanks so much in advance for your help!
Derek
dsdjb2002 [at] hotmail [dot] com
I have a Winfield Thomas Elizabeth Reverb head. The amp is clone of a Fender Deluxe (with only 1 channel and a mid control). I pulled the 6V6 tubes in favor of 6L6s and put in a SS rectifier (I was told this was safe by the builder). I biased the amp up and it worked great for about 6 months. Recently it shut down on me at a gig. My first suspicion was bad power tubes, since I didn't see them glowing when it wasn't working (the amp worked intermittently).
So I put in new power tubes, biased it up and everything was great for about 3 hours of playing time. Then it cut out on me, no sound whatsoever. Tubes not glowing. I get home from rehearsal and start doing some voltage readings. I get the tubes glowing and read the plate voltage on pin 3 and its at 875 volts!!! Needless to say the tubes stopped glowing shortly thereafter and I'm afraid to turn it on again.
What could make the plate voltage so high?? Obviously something is very wrong. What can I safely check to determine if this is a transformer issue, filter cap issue, etc?
I figured I could safely pull all the tubes and do some voltage measuring. Even with the tubes pulled I'm measuring over 700 volts on the plate pins. This leads me to believe that I have a bad power transformer (or perhaps output transformer). Would this make sense? I'm kind of a noob on this stuff and really just need a reliable gig amp that I so far lack due to these issues!
Thanks so much in advance for your help!
Derek
dsdjb2002 [at] hotmail [dot] com
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