Ok Mr Ahola has this to say
"...using a well insulated test probe connected to the chassis ground through a 10K resistor. With the chassis removed from the cabinet and the FX jacks to your left you will notice several large 5 and 1 watt resistors mounted on stand-offs away from the board. Directly above from the Bass control is R58; with the insulated 10k resistor/probe short first the left lead and then the right lead. Directly above from the Pre gain pot is R59 mounted horizontally and R60 mounted vertically. With your special resistor probe, short first the left and then the right leads of R59, and then fisrt the back and the front leads of R60. Generally any charge will be drained through the OT (output transformer) after a minute or two, but its best not to take any chances."
I presume the resistor is there to slow down the discharge process, - so the bigger value the resistor, the longer the caps take to drain.
What I would like confirmation about is what you do with the other end of the resistor lead:
is he saying 'connect one end of the lead to the chassis and then alternately connect the other end to each end of the resistor (in each case)'; or
is he saying 'connect one end to one side of the resistor (in each case) and then connect the other end to the other side of the resistor (in each case)'?
Also which is the 'front' and which is the 'back' of R60.
And is he saying to leave the lead in place for a minute or two (in each case)?
Cheers
"...using a well insulated test probe connected to the chassis ground through a 10K resistor. With the chassis removed from the cabinet and the FX jacks to your left you will notice several large 5 and 1 watt resistors mounted on stand-offs away from the board. Directly above from the Bass control is R58; with the insulated 10k resistor/probe short first the left lead and then the right lead. Directly above from the Pre gain pot is R59 mounted horizontally and R60 mounted vertically. With your special resistor probe, short first the left and then the right leads of R59, and then fisrt the back and the front leads of R60. Generally any charge will be drained through the OT (output transformer) after a minute or two, but its best not to take any chances."
I presume the resistor is there to slow down the discharge process, - so the bigger value the resistor, the longer the caps take to drain.
What I would like confirmation about is what you do with the other end of the resistor lead:
is he saying 'connect one end of the lead to the chassis and then alternately connect the other end to each end of the resistor (in each case)'; or
is he saying 'connect one end to one side of the resistor (in each case) and then connect the other end to the other side of the resistor (in each case)'?
Also which is the 'front' and which is the 'back' of R60.
And is he saying to leave the lead in place for a minute or two (in each case)?
Cheers
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