Last week my band played on a float. We used a gas generator and brought the instruments online one by one with no apparent problems. However when the bass player arrived and plugged in, we blew one solid state amp (a Traynor - fried several resistors inside before the fuse blew) and my 1970 Twin Reverb started pumping out smoke from the Vibrato inputs.
Thought it was fried but worked just fine on the mains and I played a gig afterwards with no problems.
Opened up the amp today and can't really find the culprit. The heater wires look a little cooked near the power tubes and there looks to be a little heat damage close to the vibrato inputs (which was what I was plugged into). Grid resistors all seem to measure in spec.
I strongly suspect the generator was running hot - I'll measure the output later - if so what is the most likely source for the smoke, and what should I check/replace? FWIW it looked like wire insulation cooking off to me.
(We replaced the genny with a slightly bigger one and put in some surge protectors and the rest of the day went fine).
PS mains fuse was the right kind and didn't blow.
PPS transformers were cool to the touch right afterwards
Thought it was fried but worked just fine on the mains and I played a gig afterwards with no problems.
Opened up the amp today and can't really find the culprit. The heater wires look a little cooked near the power tubes and there looks to be a little heat damage close to the vibrato inputs (which was what I was plugged into). Grid resistors all seem to measure in spec.
I strongly suspect the generator was running hot - I'll measure the output later - if so what is the most likely source for the smoke, and what should I check/replace? FWIW it looked like wire insulation cooking off to me.
(We replaced the genny with a slightly bigger one and put in some surge protectors and the rest of the day went fine).
PS mains fuse was the right kind and didn't blow.
PPS transformers were cool to the touch right afterwards
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