Ad Widget

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

resistor codes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • resistor codes

    I have a marshall dsl401 on the bench that blew it's filament supply rectifier.
    Changed all tubes and the amp won't bias.
    Resistor R31 was 1K1 instead of 15K, and that is how it left the factory years ago. I wonder how many owners this amp had, and how could they accept it biased that way (.2 volts instead of 1.4 according on the schemathic)

  • #2
    Originally posted by JC@ View Post
    I have a marshall dsl401 on the bench that blew it's filament supply rectifier.
    Changed all tubes and the amp won't bias.
    Resistor R31 was 1K1 instead of 15K, and that is how it left the factory years ago. I wonder how many owners this amp had, and how could they accept it biased that way (.2 volts instead of 1.4 according on the schemathic)
    They use a 5 band color code on a lot of those resistors. A 15K with a 5 band color code would have brown/green/black/red on it as opposed to brown/green/orange like a 4 band would have (the last color band in each is the tolerance % rating).

    Are you sure that R36 didn't blow open or drift up way off spec?
    Jon Wilder
    Wilder Amplification

    Originally posted by m-fine
    I don't know about you, but I find it a LOT easier to change a capacitor than to actually learn how to play well
    Originally posted by JoeM
    I doubt if any of my favorite players even own a soldering iron.

    Comment


    • #3
      For sure, R31 was a brown, brown, black, brown, red instead of a 15K, and indeed measured 1K1, so I guess it was a series E42 resistor (I had to look that on google btw) they plugged there in error.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by JC@ View Post
        For sure, R31 was a brown, brown, black, brown, red instead of a 15K, and indeed measured 1K1, so I guess it was a series E42 resistor (I had to look that on google btw) they plugged there in error.
        OK gotcha...yeah that would be a bit on the low side.
        Jon Wilder
        Wilder Amplification

        Originally posted by m-fine
        I don't know about you, but I find it a LOT easier to change a capacitor than to actually learn how to play well
        Originally posted by JoeM
        I doubt if any of my favorite players even own a soldering iron.

        Comment

        Working...
        X