This has been an epic journey so far. This is a little long but I'd appreciate it if you all could give me a hand here.
I have a marshall jcm 800 2203, canadian market model. I have another thread about it but I'm just going to give a quick rundown:
1. Amp cuts out for me, no sound, I dime it and it will cut in and out. I do this for about a minute or two trying to figure out what it happening and a tube blows. Turns out the speaker cable had actually died I figured out later on.
2. I pull the dead tube and replace the fuse it took with it. I now run the amp with just 2 tubes in it. I play two shows that night, the amp works for part of the night and then dies on me mid set. I open the amp up the HT fuses (which are 2x 0.5A slo-blo btw) are blown.
3. I replace the HT fuses turn it on and pop, they blow immediately. So I figure I have a bad tube. I replace the el34s in the amp and try out a quad of 6550s.
4. Power the amp up with the 6550s and some new fuses it works for about 10 minutes and then pop. the fuses blow again.
5. I recap the amp, all new power filter caps. While doing this i also happen to come across the fact that the bias pot reads at max 16Kohms when it should be reading 22Kohms. So I also replace this with a new pot.
6. I test the 6550 tubes and they all test good, I go back and test the el34s, 3 of the 4 work but one upon plugging it into my tube tester cause the tube tester to smoke. I throw this tube away.
7. I then power the amp up with a quad of KT88 tubes I have from another amp that I know work fine. The amp turns on and seems ok while idling but at one point makes some not so loud scratchy buzzy sounds. I turn the standby off, wait a second, turn it back on and it sounds fine again. I finish biasing the amp and have it sitting at roughly 20watts static dissipation.
8. I plug in and start to play, the amp sounds good it gives me a feeling better than any woman has ever made me feel (hahahaha) and as soon as I hit a nice chunky chord.... you guest it, the HT fuses blow. I recheck the tubes and they still test the same as before I ran them in this amp.
I'm just lost at this point. I want to check the driver tube plate to power tube grid coupling capacitor based on what I'm reading at the tube amp debugging page (http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/ampdebug.htm), I've read pin 5 on all the sockets and they are sitting at -37v. When I read one of the sockets it seemed to oscillate between 0 and -37 for a second but I think I just wasn't making good contact with my probe because it seemed to go away, but I'm just so stuck at this point I'll look at anything.
What can you suggest??? I'm just out of ideas! I'm going to go over all the resistors in the amp to make sure they are still to spec but I don't really know how I can go about testing all the capacitors though? I have a replacement choke OT and PT that I was going to use to build a clone of the amp that I can try if necessary but that seems like a huge without looking at everything else first. and above all, I'm sicking of buying 0.5A fuses and watching them constantly blow! Those things aren't cheap at radio shack.
I have a marshall jcm 800 2203, canadian market model. I have another thread about it but I'm just going to give a quick rundown:
1. Amp cuts out for me, no sound, I dime it and it will cut in and out. I do this for about a minute or two trying to figure out what it happening and a tube blows. Turns out the speaker cable had actually died I figured out later on.
2. I pull the dead tube and replace the fuse it took with it. I now run the amp with just 2 tubes in it. I play two shows that night, the amp works for part of the night and then dies on me mid set. I open the amp up the HT fuses (which are 2x 0.5A slo-blo btw) are blown.
3. I replace the HT fuses turn it on and pop, they blow immediately. So I figure I have a bad tube. I replace the el34s in the amp and try out a quad of 6550s.
4. Power the amp up with the 6550s and some new fuses it works for about 10 minutes and then pop. the fuses blow again.
5. I recap the amp, all new power filter caps. While doing this i also happen to come across the fact that the bias pot reads at max 16Kohms when it should be reading 22Kohms. So I also replace this with a new pot.
6. I test the 6550 tubes and they all test good, I go back and test the el34s, 3 of the 4 work but one upon plugging it into my tube tester cause the tube tester to smoke. I throw this tube away.
7. I then power the amp up with a quad of KT88 tubes I have from another amp that I know work fine. The amp turns on and seems ok while idling but at one point makes some not so loud scratchy buzzy sounds. I turn the standby off, wait a second, turn it back on and it sounds fine again. I finish biasing the amp and have it sitting at roughly 20watts static dissipation.
8. I plug in and start to play, the amp sounds good it gives me a feeling better than any woman has ever made me feel (hahahaha) and as soon as I hit a nice chunky chord.... you guest it, the HT fuses blow. I recheck the tubes and they still test the same as before I ran them in this amp.
I'm just lost at this point. I want to check the driver tube plate to power tube grid coupling capacitor based on what I'm reading at the tube amp debugging page (http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/ampdebug.htm), I've read pin 5 on all the sockets and they are sitting at -37v. When I read one of the sockets it seemed to oscillate between 0 and -37 for a second but I think I just wasn't making good contact with my probe because it seemed to go away, but I'm just so stuck at this point I'll look at anything.
What can you suggest??? I'm just out of ideas! I'm going to go over all the resistors in the amp to make sure they are still to spec but I don't really know how I can go about testing all the capacitors though? I have a replacement choke OT and PT that I was going to use to build a clone of the amp that I can try if necessary but that seems like a huge without looking at everything else first. and above all, I'm sicking of buying 0.5A fuses and watching them constantly blow! Those things aren't cheap at radio shack.
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