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Hartke 3500A fault

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  • Hartke 3500A fault

    My Hartke 3500 developed a fault during a gig last night. The sound is fuzzy - like a harsh rattling farty sound. At first I thought I had blown a speaker - but it's not that.

    Does this fault sound familiar to anyone? The amp's a few years old - I'm trying to find what it would cost to repair this - and I could use a back-up amp in ghe meantine - or just replace it.

    Ian

  • #2
    amp

    Did you open it and check for bad solder joints? Its a start

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    • #3
      Yeah, I'd open it up, apply a signal, an listen to it while I poked each part on the board using an insulated tool, like a wooden chopstick. In particular the capacitors.

      Also, along the rear edge of the main board is a row of connectors. The transformer leadsa among them. Wiggle those connedtors. ANy loose conections? I have to resolder the male pins on those now and then.
      Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

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      • #4
        Seems to be heat related

        I powered it up this morning - it seemed to work OK. The crackiling/farting came out in the last set - so I started playing it - and after 15 mins - it started crackling again - heat related?

        I'll open if up see if I get anything else.

        Ian

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        • #5
          If the fault is indeed heat-related ( drifting active component ), the use of a freezing spray might be the fastest way to find/locate the defective component(s). Wait for the problem to occur, then spray the active components one by one with the freezing spray ( Voltage stabilizers, output devices, op-amps in the preamp section, and so on ) having a friend playing notes at the same time ( or using a signal generator if you have one ) until the amp starts to work normally again, then test/replace the component you were spraying the spray on when the amp went back to normality.

          Hope this helps

          Best regards

          Bob
          Hoc unum scio: me nihil scire.

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          • #6
            It's the bass

            This surprised me....

            It's the bass - not the amp. Before I started working on it, I thought I'd better check my back-up amp for tonight's gig.

            It did the same thing - I relaced the cord, and tried other basses - and it's the Fender Jazz.

            I guess that's good news - that's gotta be easier to fix.

            Thanks for taingthe time to reply everyone.

            Ian

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            • #7
              Active pickups with a weak battery maybe?
              Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

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