I went to play my Peavey Butcher tonight, let it warm up, flipped the standby switch, and as it came on there was a scratching noise for a few seconds, then it played normally for a few more seconds, then it shut off, as in the green standby light went out, not the red power light. I turned it off and unplugged it, figuring a fuse had blown. There was a slight burning smell when I was opening it up, but all the fuses checked out okay.
There is, however, a burnt-out area between two of the traces on the preamp board. I scraped away the burnt stuff, I'm not measuring any continuity between the traces at all, and they seem pretty much intact. I have a feeling it may have been a stinkbug getting burned crawling inside the amp (my house is infested with these things; there were two more crawling around inside the chassis when I took it apart). One trace is for the filaments and the other is at B+ sooooo I figured a bug could've gotten zapped pretty good.
Nothing else looked amiss inside the amp, so I tried firing it up again. Now it is playing completely normally, at least at low-ish volume; it's too late to really crank it up. So, am I good to go? Or are there other precautions I should be taking? This amp is built like a freaking tank, but I just figured it's probably better to ask those that would know.
One more thing I noticed: the filter caps on this amp drain on their own pretty quickly. I went to discharge them when I was looking inside the chassis, and they were only holding about 10 V. My other amp will hold 400 volts for days, though. Why would the Butcher discharge so quickly? And if it's possible to automatically discharge the caps, why aren't more amps designed like that?
There is, however, a burnt-out area between two of the traces on the preamp board. I scraped away the burnt stuff, I'm not measuring any continuity between the traces at all, and they seem pretty much intact. I have a feeling it may have been a stinkbug getting burned crawling inside the amp (my house is infested with these things; there were two more crawling around inside the chassis when I took it apart). One trace is for the filaments and the other is at B+ sooooo I figured a bug could've gotten zapped pretty good.
Nothing else looked amiss inside the amp, so I tried firing it up again. Now it is playing completely normally, at least at low-ish volume; it's too late to really crank it up. So, am I good to go? Or are there other precautions I should be taking? This amp is built like a freaking tank, but I just figured it's probably better to ask those that would know.
One more thing I noticed: the filter caps on this amp drain on their own pretty quickly. I went to discharge them when I was looking inside the chassis, and they were only holding about 10 V. My other amp will hold 400 volts for days, though. Why would the Butcher discharge so quickly? And if it's possible to automatically discharge the caps, why aren't more amps designed like that?
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