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Acoustic 150B in horrible condition

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  • Acoustic 150B in horrible condition

    Got a really beat-up Acoustic 150B. I really want to fix it up. Here's what happened with it.

    - When I got it, the first channel didn't work at all and the second channel only worked with one of the two inputs and would be too quiet to use when the bright switch was turned on. The volume knob didn't work. Most of the potentiometers seemed to be functional according to my multimeter, but certain ones (such as the volume) made no change to the sound, even if they appeared to be working.

    - Opened it up to try and fix the first channel. Saw that one red wire leading from the preamp strip to the power amp section was cut. Unplugged the amp, told my friend to plug in the soldering iron. He plugged in the amp too by accident, so the amp was unintentionally powered on when I tried to solder the wire together. There was a spark and the amp shut off. Left the wire un-connected.

    - Tried turning on the amp to see if it was dead. It turned back on, so I plugged it into a cab and tried playing it. Everything seemed fine, and then the volume faded out and let out a tiny bit of steam.

    - Checked the fuse. Fuse was blown, so I went to RadioShack to get a replacement. Put in a new fuse and the amp turned on. Amp could stay on for a long time without blowing a fuse. Amp now gets very hot very quickly (hotter than it should) and the input is audible, but there is a loud buzz that doesn't go away.

    Is there any hope for this amp? It seems pretty messed up. I'm just hoping it's not FUBAR.

  • #2
    It is unlikely that the amp is FUBAR. It is SOMEWHAT likely that you might be in over your head, and VERY likely that you should have other people plugging your amp and soldering iron in. If it was a tube amp, you could have been cooked!

    You probably took out something in the power supply. Sounds like it could be a filter cap, but I don't know.
    John R. Frondelli
    dBm Pro Audio Services, New York, NY

    "Mediocre is the new 'Good' "

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    • #3
      Thanks for the hint. I'll check for any damaged capacitors and report back.

      I called up my local music shop to get a repair quote and they said it could be anywhere from $70 to $300. I hope I can fix it myself for not too much money.

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      • #4
        What gets hot? Transformer, output devices on heatsink, resistors on output board, etc?

        Do not use a cabinet with an impedance under 4 ohms.

        Measure the voltage on the big power supply filter cap - what does it read?

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        • #5
          Originally posted by gbono View Post
          What gets hot? Transformer, output devices on heatsink, resistors on output board, etc?

          Do not use a cabinet with an impedance under 4 ohms.

          Measure the voltage on the big power supply filter cap - what does it read?
          I'm using an old analog multimeter so nothing is too accurate but it seems to read around 100V. The resistors on the output board are getting hot.

          Comment


          • #6
            Sorry - started a reply and got side tracked

            70VDC at filter capacitor would be normal - don't know why your seeing 100 V unless meter is uncal. What about 3 AAA batteries in series what does your meter read?

            Download the 150 manual from this site. Unofficial Acoustic Control Corporation Homepage -- Manuals

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