Greetings guys,
So I have Classic 30 from about 2002 that recently developed a popping noise that happens regularly every 2-3 seconds or so. For the most part it's faint and stays in the background pretty well, and the amp is still playable. But it's one of those things like once you know it's there, you can't stop hearing it.
If all else fails I'll give it to my drummer to use as a metronome.
Anyway, here's what I've observed so far...
- The popping has been occurring for the past month or so. After I first noticed it, I swapped out/upgraded my speaker and all tubes since that was on my to-do list anyway. Cleaned and checked sockets and everything looked decent, so I don't think anything funky is going on with those components. However, the problem still persists.
- The popping occurs regardless of channel or reverb selection.
- The popping *does not* happen, or at least isn't audible, when nothing is plugged into the input. Additionally, the popping *does not* occur if I have a guitar plugged into it directly with the volume all the way down, or my pedal board plugged into it with say, my compressor pedal on but turned all the way down. If there is any sorta real signal getting to the amp though, and levels are up on my guitar/board, or I leave the loose end of the cable just sitting on the carpet to catch some static fuzz, the popping is really evident.
- The loudness of the popping is indeed affected by the volume controls of the amp.
- The intonation of the popping seems to be affected by the EQ knobs.
- The popping seems to be more pronounced the more gain there is. For instance, if I have the guitar just plugged in directly and switched to both of my not-so-hot humbuckers, the popping is real faint. You really have to listen for it, but it's still there mocking me. If I'm going through my pedal board and switch on my DS-1, or toggle my wah on high, etc. then it's quite a bit more obvious.
Anyone else here ever see this problem? Know what it could be? I suspect that if it's able to be controlled by volume and EQ, and isn't dependent on the channel that the issue is coming pretty early in the circuit. A bad cap perhaps? Grounding issue?
Thanks for your time gents,
- CloudNine
So I have Classic 30 from about 2002 that recently developed a popping noise that happens regularly every 2-3 seconds or so. For the most part it's faint and stays in the background pretty well, and the amp is still playable. But it's one of those things like once you know it's there, you can't stop hearing it.
If all else fails I'll give it to my drummer to use as a metronome.
Anyway, here's what I've observed so far...
- The popping has been occurring for the past month or so. After I first noticed it, I swapped out/upgraded my speaker and all tubes since that was on my to-do list anyway. Cleaned and checked sockets and everything looked decent, so I don't think anything funky is going on with those components. However, the problem still persists.
- The popping occurs regardless of channel or reverb selection.
- The popping *does not* happen, or at least isn't audible, when nothing is plugged into the input. Additionally, the popping *does not* occur if I have a guitar plugged into it directly with the volume all the way down, or my pedal board plugged into it with say, my compressor pedal on but turned all the way down. If there is any sorta real signal getting to the amp though, and levels are up on my guitar/board, or I leave the loose end of the cable just sitting on the carpet to catch some static fuzz, the popping is really evident.
- The loudness of the popping is indeed affected by the volume controls of the amp.
- The intonation of the popping seems to be affected by the EQ knobs.
- The popping seems to be more pronounced the more gain there is. For instance, if I have the guitar just plugged in directly and switched to both of my not-so-hot humbuckers, the popping is real faint. You really have to listen for it, but it's still there mocking me. If I'm going through my pedal board and switch on my DS-1, or toggle my wah on high, etc. then it's quite a bit more obvious.
Anyone else here ever see this problem? Know what it could be? I suspect that if it's able to be controlled by volume and EQ, and isn't dependent on the channel that the issue is coming pretty early in the circuit. A bad cap perhaps? Grounding issue?
Thanks for your time gents,
- CloudNine
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