A guy brought me a 2000 model DSL 100 last week - he'd been playing it and smelled smoke, so he shut it down and brought it over.
I opened it up and one of the screen resistors was burnt, cracked apart. After pulling the main PCB I noticed a burnt ceramic cap next to the screen resistor.
l looked up the schematic, and the cap is a 22pF/500V that bridges pins 3 and 4 on the last EL34 socket. It apparently burnt and shorted, and it took out the screen resistor too. Since the current is passing from screen to plate (and vice versa) the 1-ohm cathode resistors didn't blow. Nor did the HT fuse, although it was the correct value and type.
I own a DSL 50, and a few other DSLs have passed through my hands, but this 2000 model was the most recent (my 50 is a '97). This cap doesn't exist on my '97, so it must have been added on a later rev (they're up to rev 6 on the main PCB).
I just left the cap out, replaced the screen resistor, and it was good to go.
Fast forward to this morning - a friend brings over his new DSL 100 - bought at the GC Green Tag sale this weekend - to have me check the bias. I do, and fire it up. After a few minutes...I smell smoke.
I pull the chassis, and that cap is looking a little toasty. I fired the chassis up and let it sit, energized, but with no input. Everything's fine.
I plug in a guitar and hit a chord, and the lead on the plate side of the cap lights up. Mute the strings, it cools off. Lather, rinse, repeat.
I pulled the cap (what was left of it) and it's good.
What the hell is going on? Why would you shunt ultrasonics to the screen supply? And why only on one side of the OT?
And more importantly, why does it fail with apparent regularity under normal operating conditions?
I opened it up and one of the screen resistors was burnt, cracked apart. After pulling the main PCB I noticed a burnt ceramic cap next to the screen resistor.
l looked up the schematic, and the cap is a 22pF/500V that bridges pins 3 and 4 on the last EL34 socket. It apparently burnt and shorted, and it took out the screen resistor too. Since the current is passing from screen to plate (and vice versa) the 1-ohm cathode resistors didn't blow. Nor did the HT fuse, although it was the correct value and type.
I own a DSL 50, and a few other DSLs have passed through my hands, but this 2000 model was the most recent (my 50 is a '97). This cap doesn't exist on my '97, so it must have been added on a later rev (they're up to rev 6 on the main PCB).
I just left the cap out, replaced the screen resistor, and it was good to go.
Fast forward to this morning - a friend brings over his new DSL 100 - bought at the GC Green Tag sale this weekend - to have me check the bias. I do, and fire it up. After a few minutes...I smell smoke.
I pull the chassis, and that cap is looking a little toasty. I fired the chassis up and let it sit, energized, but with no input. Everything's fine.
I plug in a guitar and hit a chord, and the lead on the plate side of the cap lights up. Mute the strings, it cools off. Lather, rinse, repeat.
I pulled the cap (what was left of it) and it's good.
What the hell is going on? Why would you shunt ultrasonics to the screen supply? And why only on one side of the OT?
And more importantly, why does it fail with apparent regularity under normal operating conditions?
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