Hi,
I stumbled into agreeing to help a friend of friend with a Fender Princeton power tube swap.
It turns out it's a Princeton Reverb reissue and something is funky and that's why the owner wanted new tubes.
If I can't help the amp will probably have to be shipped out to someone who can.
I played the amp a bit and there is a fitzy, farty white noise that piggybacks the basic sound.
I pulled each tube and re seated them to clean up the contacts in the sockets. (no spray cleaner... just mechanical movement)
All the pots on the front seem clean.
I noticed that all the preamp tubes have been replaced with NOS JAN made in USA GE 12AX7 tubes from the last runs in the 1990s?. Which means that there's no 12AT7 at the driver and no "7025" at the first stage.
I placed my CompuBias meter in the sockets and measured the factory stock EH Groove Tubes 6V6 tubes. I noticed that the bias readings are moving around too much. FWIW, I have the tremolo controls at 1 but it isn't switched out because I don't have the switch.
I would take a reading and see something like 11ma and 14ma draw and then I play a chord and hear the noise and see that the meter would change to something like 16ma and 10ma.
The replacement tubes also fluctuate and they are running so hot they red plate... so I pulled them imediately and want to settle the real issue before I worry about the new tubes.
I have read that at high draw the tremolo circuit will act funny... but an average 13ma or 14ma draw seems typical for what I am reading about this amp.
I have not touched the bias adjust pot and it is my intention to ask a few questions and study the reissue circuit before I proceed further.
I am also aware that I may not want to actually work on the amp if it needs a fresh component on the circuit board... it seems like the Reissue isn't made to be repaired easily. My friends know that I am just a old fashioned hard wired type of hobby and maintenance guy... so I can bow out... I just want to see if I can help and if I can't we'll move on.
Does anyone have any thoughts or ideas about what I should look for?
My plan is to place a real 12AT7 in the driver and maybe pull the chassis and start tracing voltages.
I thought perhaps there might be a known weak spot on these reissue amps that I should focus on.
Thanks very much for any info you can share.
best regards,
mike
I stumbled into agreeing to help a friend of friend with a Fender Princeton power tube swap.
It turns out it's a Princeton Reverb reissue and something is funky and that's why the owner wanted new tubes.
If I can't help the amp will probably have to be shipped out to someone who can.
I played the amp a bit and there is a fitzy, farty white noise that piggybacks the basic sound.
I pulled each tube and re seated them to clean up the contacts in the sockets. (no spray cleaner... just mechanical movement)
All the pots on the front seem clean.
I noticed that all the preamp tubes have been replaced with NOS JAN made in USA GE 12AX7 tubes from the last runs in the 1990s?. Which means that there's no 12AT7 at the driver and no "7025" at the first stage.
I placed my CompuBias meter in the sockets and measured the factory stock EH Groove Tubes 6V6 tubes. I noticed that the bias readings are moving around too much. FWIW, I have the tremolo controls at 1 but it isn't switched out because I don't have the switch.
I would take a reading and see something like 11ma and 14ma draw and then I play a chord and hear the noise and see that the meter would change to something like 16ma and 10ma.
The replacement tubes also fluctuate and they are running so hot they red plate... so I pulled them imediately and want to settle the real issue before I worry about the new tubes.
I have read that at high draw the tremolo circuit will act funny... but an average 13ma or 14ma draw seems typical for what I am reading about this amp.
I have not touched the bias adjust pot and it is my intention to ask a few questions and study the reissue circuit before I proceed further.
I am also aware that I may not want to actually work on the amp if it needs a fresh component on the circuit board... it seems like the Reissue isn't made to be repaired easily. My friends know that I am just a old fashioned hard wired type of hobby and maintenance guy... so I can bow out... I just want to see if I can help and if I can't we'll move on.
Does anyone have any thoughts or ideas about what I should look for?
My plan is to place a real 12AT7 in the driver and maybe pull the chassis and start tracing voltages.
I thought perhaps there might be a known weak spot on these reissue amps that I should focus on.
Thanks very much for any info you can share.
best regards,
mike
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