Actually, not as a pro since I have no business licence in place yet for this service. But I've decided to "scab" a few jobs to see how it goes before jumping in.
This repair was on a Kustom 250. First, I don't know how many here have seen the inside of one of these amps but the build quality rivals ANY PCB tube amp of any era. Just fantastic and easy to work on.
The amp came to me not working. I looked up the schem and identified the "to module" jack as a way into the power amp. I injected a signal there and the power amp worked fine. So I plugged into the preamp and got only a very very faint sound. But, I could hear the reverb operating in the faint sound. That being the case I surmized that the preamp was also working fine since whatever amp powers the tank must be working. So the problem had to be between the effects and the power amp. This amount of trouble shooting took about five minutes.
So I opened up the amp, injected a signal and, following the schematic, traced the signal. I was expecting a bad op amp from the effects to the power amp. But it was even easier than that. Just a cold solder joint on the cable plug from the effecs board to the power amp board. No parts required. I had to remove the effects board to access the bad connection. Sucked out the old solder and reflowed the joint and the amp works perfectly.
It took longer to take the amp apart and put it back together than it did to diagnose and repair it. I'm charging the customer for an hour just because that seems to make sense as a minimum charge.
I'll try a couple more repairs and if they go as well or even close I'm definitely going for the business licence.
Thanks to all here that encouraged me.
This repair was on a Kustom 250. First, I don't know how many here have seen the inside of one of these amps but the build quality rivals ANY PCB tube amp of any era. Just fantastic and easy to work on.
The amp came to me not working. I looked up the schem and identified the "to module" jack as a way into the power amp. I injected a signal there and the power amp worked fine. So I plugged into the preamp and got only a very very faint sound. But, I could hear the reverb operating in the faint sound. That being the case I surmized that the preamp was also working fine since whatever amp powers the tank must be working. So the problem had to be between the effects and the power amp. This amount of trouble shooting took about five minutes.
So I opened up the amp, injected a signal and, following the schematic, traced the signal. I was expecting a bad op amp from the effects to the power amp. But it was even easier than that. Just a cold solder joint on the cable plug from the effecs board to the power amp board. No parts required. I had to remove the effects board to access the bad connection. Sucked out the old solder and reflowed the joint and the amp works perfectly.
It took longer to take the amp apart and put it back together than it did to diagnose and repair it. I'm charging the customer for an hour just because that seems to make sense as a minimum charge.
I'll try a couple more repairs and if they go as well or even close I'm definitely going for the business licence.
Thanks to all here that encouraged me.
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