So, I bought a mid-late seventies Ampeg V4 amp this summer. I am trying to get some ideas to take back to the tech in terms of troubleshooting the hum issue.
The basic issue is that there is a hum at start up that is minimally improved with the hum balance. Moving the controls on the tone stack shows the midrange affects the hum the most. With careful adjustment of the hum balance I can get the thing completely quiet if I turn the midrange all the way down. Turning it up makes it worse.
Some history is necessary here too. After buying the amp I took it to a tech #1 and had the preamp and power tubes replaced and I also had the electrolytic caps replaced as well. I was there when he powered it up, and I'm pretty sure he didn't use a variac to do it. Only after a lot of research afterwards did I discover that you should probably use a variac for this. Anyway there was no improvement in the problem.
I took it to tech #2 who found several burnt out resistors on the preamp board and they were replaced. He also found that the preamp tube closest to the transformer was microphonic. After a lot of switching of tubes he got some reduction in the hum. Not much.
Tech #2 is a good guy and wants to get this thing right. I am going to take it back to him but I wanted to get some ideas as to where he might be looking. He thinks their might be noise from the transformer on that preamp tube.
At the minimum, I think the hum pot should be replaced and I have one for him to install I got from fliptops.net. Whether the lack of variac use means the cap job is screwed, I'm not sure. Ideas about the transformer too would help. My gut says that since things are noticeably worse and better with the midrange means that it lies in the preamp circuit dealing with this control.
Here is a video of my amp doing its hum thing and a quick walk through of what I'm experiencing.
Ampeg V4 Hum Challenge - YouTube
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
The basic issue is that there is a hum at start up that is minimally improved with the hum balance. Moving the controls on the tone stack shows the midrange affects the hum the most. With careful adjustment of the hum balance I can get the thing completely quiet if I turn the midrange all the way down. Turning it up makes it worse.
Some history is necessary here too. After buying the amp I took it to a tech #1 and had the preamp and power tubes replaced and I also had the electrolytic caps replaced as well. I was there when he powered it up, and I'm pretty sure he didn't use a variac to do it. Only after a lot of research afterwards did I discover that you should probably use a variac for this. Anyway there was no improvement in the problem.
I took it to tech #2 who found several burnt out resistors on the preamp board and they were replaced. He also found that the preamp tube closest to the transformer was microphonic. After a lot of switching of tubes he got some reduction in the hum. Not much.
Tech #2 is a good guy and wants to get this thing right. I am going to take it back to him but I wanted to get some ideas as to where he might be looking. He thinks their might be noise from the transformer on that preamp tube.
At the minimum, I think the hum pot should be replaced and I have one for him to install I got from fliptops.net. Whether the lack of variac use means the cap job is screwed, I'm not sure. Ideas about the transformer too would help. My gut says that since things are noticeably worse and better with the midrange means that it lies in the preamp circuit dealing with this control.
Here is a video of my amp doing its hum thing and a quick walk through of what I'm experiencing.
Ampeg V4 Hum Challenge - YouTube
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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