Picked up a T50 (and a conjoined-TL806 2x12 cab) at a massive 3block yard sale today.
The tag on the T50 said '$75 needs tube' and I figured I could at least use the iron and/or chassis for something if it's not repairable - got the head and cab for $60.
Neither channel works right or well, but I get something out of both. The reverb works gangbusters - much louder than either actual channel, so I walked V6 (reverb drive/recover) down the line to see if any of the other tubes were at fault - triode A of V4 being the main suspect. Also cleaned the FX return jack with a few pluggings-into. No joy. Sound fades in and out, is never very loud (except with reverb on) and both channels pretty distorted.
Anyway, I started looking at the voltages - B+, screen, preamp string and bias looked OK on the DC scale, but when I looked at the AC, I got readings of 800 to 1kV on the main filters and in the preamp. The input voltage is a nice 121VAC, so I'm reasonably sure it's not the meter.
I'm left with pilot error (all readings taken using same ground point, 600VAC scale on meter for AC - 200VAC gave out-of-range error, 600VDC scale for DC), or something BAD wrong in the rectifier/filter chain.
Ideas?
The tag on the T50 said '$75 needs tube' and I figured I could at least use the iron and/or chassis for something if it's not repairable - got the head and cab for $60.
Neither channel works right or well, but I get something out of both. The reverb works gangbusters - much louder than either actual channel, so I walked V6 (reverb drive/recover) down the line to see if any of the other tubes were at fault - triode A of V4 being the main suspect. Also cleaned the FX return jack with a few pluggings-into. No joy. Sound fades in and out, is never very loud (except with reverb on) and both channels pretty distorted.
Anyway, I started looking at the voltages - B+, screen, preamp string and bias looked OK on the DC scale, but when I looked at the AC, I got readings of 800 to 1kV on the main filters and in the preamp. The input voltage is a nice 121VAC, so I'm reasonably sure it's not the meter.
I'm left with pilot error (all readings taken using same ground point, 600VAC scale on meter for AC - 200VAC gave out-of-range error, 600VDC scale for DC), or something BAD wrong in the rectifier/filter chain.
Ideas?
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