I would greatly appreciate anyone's help! I have read a few books about amplifier repair but I'm certainly still a novice.
I have a 1979 Marshall 50 watt head with old GE 6550's with a ton of miles on them (20 years?) and I just bought a BiasPro bias probe kit to see why my old amp is not sounding golden like it used to. It is low in volume and does not sing like she used to. It does have a Mike Morin extra pre amp tube installed.
Anyways, I hook the head up to a variac to make sure it's getting 120 volts. I've connect a 4x12 cab to the output. I have installed the bias probes and reinstalled the old GE 6550's and I read around 15 dc milli-volts on one tube and 18 on the other, roughly. I turned the bias all the way up and I can get only 30 milli-volts. The probes have a 1 ohm shunt resister built inline so using Ohms Law I convert the milli-volts to milli-amps and read 15 and 18 milli-amps as my bias amperage.
So. can it be that the old tubes just build up resistance over the years and are causing the current drop or is it possible the original P/T is dying (How can I tell? Where do I read the voltages from and would it be AC or DC?) or can it be something else?
Thanks in advance,
Robert
I have a 1979 Marshall 50 watt head with old GE 6550's with a ton of miles on them (20 years?) and I just bought a BiasPro bias probe kit to see why my old amp is not sounding golden like it used to. It is low in volume and does not sing like she used to. It does have a Mike Morin extra pre amp tube installed.
Anyways, I hook the head up to a variac to make sure it's getting 120 volts. I've connect a 4x12 cab to the output. I have installed the bias probes and reinstalled the old GE 6550's and I read around 15 dc milli-volts on one tube and 18 on the other, roughly. I turned the bias all the way up and I can get only 30 milli-volts. The probes have a 1 ohm shunt resister built inline so using Ohms Law I convert the milli-volts to milli-amps and read 15 and 18 milli-amps as my bias amperage.
So. can it be that the old tubes just build up resistance over the years and are causing the current drop or is it possible the original P/T is dying (How can I tell? Where do I read the voltages from and would it be AC or DC?) or can it be something else?
Thanks in advance,
Robert
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