Got my friend's Hot Rod Deluxe back with the other ceramic resistor (R78) loose, so it didn't switch channels. I fixed R79 last year. (This thing gets a LOT of use, and moving).
The clean channel was working fine last Tuesday. Now, the amp has very low volume, gets compressed and distorted, and causes the output tubes to do quite a bit more of a "blue-light show" when playing.
All I did was lift the two ceramic resistors, and apply a bit of high-temperature (650 degree) silicone under the ends to help hold them in place, and resolder them, running a solid-core wire from the leg of R78 where the pad had lifted to the next component on the trace. The switching now works fine.
I'm getting crazy voltage readings starting at pin 1 of V1, according to the schematics.
TP2 there shows it should be 180mV. I read 245V.
TP3 is OK, TP4 shows 13 mV, I get 0.
TP5, TP6 and TP8 are close, but a few volts low.
TP7 shows 33mV, I get 0. TP9 close.
TP10 shows 580mV, I get 0.
TP11 shows 13.3V, I get 230V.
And on, and on.
Is it possible I broke a ground or something while removing this thing from the chassis? Does it sound like something is shorted? Bad component that blew out after the switching got fixed?
Nothing looks burned, and I've inspected all the solder joints, and poked around and tapped on everything. I tube-tested, and then swapped out ALL tubes, to no avail. I did continuity from the tube sockets to the main board. I've changed guitars, cables and speakers. I've measured resistors, and did quite a lot of circuit continuity.
Any ideas? It's driving me crazy that a relatively simple fix (I thought) turned into this.
Thanks,
Brad1
The clean channel was working fine last Tuesday. Now, the amp has very low volume, gets compressed and distorted, and causes the output tubes to do quite a bit more of a "blue-light show" when playing.
All I did was lift the two ceramic resistors, and apply a bit of high-temperature (650 degree) silicone under the ends to help hold them in place, and resolder them, running a solid-core wire from the leg of R78 where the pad had lifted to the next component on the trace. The switching now works fine.
I'm getting crazy voltage readings starting at pin 1 of V1, according to the schematics.
TP2 there shows it should be 180mV. I read 245V.
TP3 is OK, TP4 shows 13 mV, I get 0.
TP5, TP6 and TP8 are close, but a few volts low.
TP7 shows 33mV, I get 0. TP9 close.
TP10 shows 580mV, I get 0.
TP11 shows 13.3V, I get 230V.
And on, and on.
Is it possible I broke a ground or something while removing this thing from the chassis? Does it sound like something is shorted? Bad component that blew out after the switching got fixed?
Nothing looks burned, and I've inspected all the solder joints, and poked around and tapped on everything. I tube-tested, and then swapped out ALL tubes, to no avail. I did continuity from the tube sockets to the main board. I've changed guitars, cables and speakers. I've measured resistors, and did quite a lot of circuit continuity.
Any ideas? It's driving me crazy that a relatively simple fix (I thought) turned into this.
Thanks,
Brad1
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