It's not a guitar amp, but the same principles apply :-)
A client asked me to take a look at a late 50s Grommes 10PG-8 mono integrated amp: 2 x 12AX7, 2 x EL84, 11W output.
With three coupling cap replacements, it was working fine, but the power transformer had a loud and annoying buzz. It wasn't blowing fuses and wasn't drawing too much current. All secondary voltages were where they were supposed to be, and it didn't get hot. I tried tightening the machine screws holding the laminations and bell-ends together, but that didn't work.
Fortunately, the leads were long enough to allow me to examine the interior without desoldering everything, and I found loose pieces of insulating paper that looked like they'd originally been glued in place to the insulating paper surrounding the windings. I painted a little varnish on them, put them back in place, reassembled the transformer, and let it dry.
Result: a perfectly quiet power transformer. Those pieces of loose paper were able to produce a surprising amount of noise.
This amp has a "Flat" setting on the selector switch that makes a decent guitar input. With existing tone controls and 2 x EL84 outputs, it's not a bad little guitar amp.
The sad part is that it had a pair of shield-logo Mullard EL84s in it that initially looked to me like they might be good--little getter wear, etc..., but the leaky "Little Chief" coupling capacitors had ruined them. They died young.
A client asked me to take a look at a late 50s Grommes 10PG-8 mono integrated amp: 2 x 12AX7, 2 x EL84, 11W output.
With three coupling cap replacements, it was working fine, but the power transformer had a loud and annoying buzz. It wasn't blowing fuses and wasn't drawing too much current. All secondary voltages were where they were supposed to be, and it didn't get hot. I tried tightening the machine screws holding the laminations and bell-ends together, but that didn't work.
Fortunately, the leads were long enough to allow me to examine the interior without desoldering everything, and I found loose pieces of insulating paper that looked like they'd originally been glued in place to the insulating paper surrounding the windings. I painted a little varnish on them, put them back in place, reassembled the transformer, and let it dry.
Result: a perfectly quiet power transformer. Those pieces of loose paper were able to produce a surprising amount of noise.
This amp has a "Flat" setting on the selector switch that makes a decent guitar input. With existing tone controls and 2 x EL84 outputs, it's not a bad little guitar amp.
The sad part is that it had a pair of shield-logo Mullard EL84s in it that initially looked to me like they might be good--little getter wear, etc..., but the leaky "Little Chief" coupling capacitors had ruined them. They died young.
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