I got a script logo 5150 a few weeks ago, been having a lot of fun with it.
I installed a bias pot, 470 Ohm screen grid resistors, choke, and rewired standby switch as described in this article. It removed the "pop" but it takes over 10 seconds for the standby light to go off?
Choke Troubleshooting - Premier Guitar
Everything was working fine for a couple weeks, experimented with different tubes and a MXR Smart Gate and an ISP Decimator G String. Have been running it on two power tubes with speaker switch at 8 for a 16 Ohm cab. Slowly realized that one of the power tubes that came with it would crap out after 20 minutes of heavy loud pummeling. Gave it a real long loud workout with a nice newer pair of SED 6L6 and everything seemed peachy keen.
The Problem:
I started out the next day by plugging all my pedals in which I haven't done for a while. All of a sudden, I have an oscillation/feedback squeal! It's NOT the guitar, it's NOT the tubes. I don't even think I turned on a single pedal, it was immediate and obvious.
I got rid of the pedals immediately of course and swapped all the tubes. Two or four power tubes - no difference. After a lot of trial and error, it only happens when the Decimator G String is plugged into the effects loop and the guitar out jack plugged into the front of the amp. Smart gate in the loop works fine, but of course the smart gate does not create a connection between the effects loop and input jacks like the G String does.
I'm totally baffled. The Decimator seems to work fine on another amp I have that has an effects loop, but I'm not ruling out that it's the issue. The 5150 works perfectly in any conceivable configuration except using the dang Decimator! And it worked fine for weeks! I literally changed nothing about the amp from working fine to squaling except plugging in a chain of pedals.
I've had weird oscillation issues on other amps that seemed to be caused by a Radial Headbone VT (switches between two tube amp heads and one cabinet). But they mostly went away and only happened with the Headbone. I never used it on the 5150, I'm just saying that there IS a possibility that one of my pedals is hurting my amps?? The first thing I do to troubleshoot though is go straight into the amp if I have ANY problems because I've gone through phases where I messed around with pedals a lot.
The squeal only happens if the gain is up pretty high, on either channel but it does sound a little different on each channel. It needs a certain amount of total gain from the combined pre and post, turning either one up all the way will not make it happen unless the other is also up pretty high. If I turn the pre down a bit I can get away with turning the post up a bit, if that makes sense. On lead channel, if the pre knob is set in the right place, the post knob changes the pitch of the squeal as I have seen others describe. The G String blocks the squeal, so it's happening before the effects loop send. There is no resistance between the grounds of all the jacks. With the cables all plugged into the Decimator, as soon as the ground of either of the effects loop cables contacts the ground of the effects loop jacks on the amp, it starts squealing, it does not need to have either of them seated all the way in - it happens even when the tips are not connected.
It happens no matter what position the bright, crunch switches are in. The resonance and presence have no effect. The treble control blocks it if it's turned down to 2 or lower so I guess it's coming in before the tone stack.
The only other factor I can think of is that something weird happened once or twice when I turned the mid knob, I can't even really remember what, but I had planned on cleaning all the pots, then didn't bother because it never happened again.
Thanks in advance for any help or insight!
http://www.blueguitar.org/new/schem/peavey/5150evh.pdf
I installed a bias pot, 470 Ohm screen grid resistors, choke, and rewired standby switch as described in this article. It removed the "pop" but it takes over 10 seconds for the standby light to go off?
Choke Troubleshooting - Premier Guitar
Everything was working fine for a couple weeks, experimented with different tubes and a MXR Smart Gate and an ISP Decimator G String. Have been running it on two power tubes with speaker switch at 8 for a 16 Ohm cab. Slowly realized that one of the power tubes that came with it would crap out after 20 minutes of heavy loud pummeling. Gave it a real long loud workout with a nice newer pair of SED 6L6 and everything seemed peachy keen.
The Problem:
I started out the next day by plugging all my pedals in which I haven't done for a while. All of a sudden, I have an oscillation/feedback squeal! It's NOT the guitar, it's NOT the tubes. I don't even think I turned on a single pedal, it was immediate and obvious.
I got rid of the pedals immediately of course and swapped all the tubes. Two or four power tubes - no difference. After a lot of trial and error, it only happens when the Decimator G String is plugged into the effects loop and the guitar out jack plugged into the front of the amp. Smart gate in the loop works fine, but of course the smart gate does not create a connection between the effects loop and input jacks like the G String does.
I'm totally baffled. The Decimator seems to work fine on another amp I have that has an effects loop, but I'm not ruling out that it's the issue. The 5150 works perfectly in any conceivable configuration except using the dang Decimator! And it worked fine for weeks! I literally changed nothing about the amp from working fine to squaling except plugging in a chain of pedals.
I've had weird oscillation issues on other amps that seemed to be caused by a Radial Headbone VT (switches between two tube amp heads and one cabinet). But they mostly went away and only happened with the Headbone. I never used it on the 5150, I'm just saying that there IS a possibility that one of my pedals is hurting my amps?? The first thing I do to troubleshoot though is go straight into the amp if I have ANY problems because I've gone through phases where I messed around with pedals a lot.
The squeal only happens if the gain is up pretty high, on either channel but it does sound a little different on each channel. It needs a certain amount of total gain from the combined pre and post, turning either one up all the way will not make it happen unless the other is also up pretty high. If I turn the pre down a bit I can get away with turning the post up a bit, if that makes sense. On lead channel, if the pre knob is set in the right place, the post knob changes the pitch of the squeal as I have seen others describe. The G String blocks the squeal, so it's happening before the effects loop send. There is no resistance between the grounds of all the jacks. With the cables all plugged into the Decimator, as soon as the ground of either of the effects loop cables contacts the ground of the effects loop jacks on the amp, it starts squealing, it does not need to have either of them seated all the way in - it happens even when the tips are not connected.
It happens no matter what position the bright, crunch switches are in. The resonance and presence have no effect. The treble control blocks it if it's turned down to 2 or lower so I guess it's coming in before the tone stack.
The only other factor I can think of is that something weird happened once or twice when I turned the mid knob, I can't even really remember what, but I had planned on cleaning all the pots, then didn't bother because it never happened again.
Thanks in advance for any help or insight!
http://www.blueguitar.org/new/schem/peavey/5150evh.pdf
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