Howdy folks. Long-time forum browser, first time poster here. My current project is an Ampeg Gemini VI rebuild. I have the widely available Joe Piazza schematic, but it does not have voltages at any of the filter caps/supplies and no voltages at the tube pins. My Gemini VI was pretty thrashed when i got it--shorted power tube, bad PT full of carbon conducting 119vac intermittently to the chassis, hack-job ac filter 'repair' from a previous owner that cooked when the power tube shorted(I'm sure the 25amp fuse they installed didn't help the situation.) diodes were cooked, some resistors were cooked. thing was just a mess. I have new matched pair of EH 7591's, good old 12ax7's and 6cg7s, and a good selection of 6u8, 6gh8 type tubes(I rewired the 7199 socket for the cheaper tubes, the 7199 that was in it showed substantial grid leakage). New diodes and filter caps. Replaced the coupling caps and all of the other old electrolytic caps with new orange drops. New bias diode and bias cap. Bolted a power transformer from a Hammond A-100 to the chassis and wired it up. I am still getting a weak and grainy sound out of it. Power tubes are matched and the bias set to the spec -50v. If anybody has a schematic with proper voltages on it, or if anybody has a good working Gemini VI and can take voltage readings at the filter caps and tube pins I would very much appreciate it. I've had this amp on the bench for 2 months now and I just want it to work.
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Ampeg Gemini VI--Anybody PLEASE have a schematic with voltages?
Collapse
X
-
What I normally do is : write the factory an email, so in your case Ampeg.
Normally they will reply to you within one or two days and in all my cases they have sent me the service documents, just like that.
Just tell them you bought one and it needs repair or something like that.
Greetzzz,
CornElvis
-
Thanks guys! I just got the schematic from Ampeg Tech Support. It doesn't have all the voltages but it has enough to make some progress I hope. The hammond A-100(that's a 6V6/12AX7/12AU7 chassis) power tranny is nearly spot on for this application. Filter cap voltages are within 1-2% of spec. I have 318v on the plate of the pentode section of the drive tube(the 6u8/6gh8 I swapped for the 7199) and the schematic calls for 125v. Fixing that should help. The power tube plate voltage is 426vdc with a -50vdc bias. The schematic doesn't give plate voltages for the power tubes, but the value I show is within the range I would expect for a 7591A(360-420VDC) I will post an update when I have the amp closer to spec V's.
PS--anybody have experience with the 6u8/6gh8 swap for the 7199? I have access to a good supply of these tubes. Got a 6an8 too that I can plug in. I want to get this thing working good before I drop in my pair of vintage RCA 7591's"If you can get the smoke back in the amp, it will work."
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mr Johnny Birchwood View PostThe power tube plate voltage is 426vdc with a -50vdc bias. The schematic doesn't give plate voltages for the power tubes, but the value I show is within the range I would expect for a 7591A(360-420VDC) I will post an update when I have the amp closer to spec V's.
btw.. somebody sawed off the speaker cab from the chassis of the Gemini VI, which was found in the parking lot of a strip-club in LA before it came to me(reverb tank still attached) so I'm running it through a homemade cab(picture below) with a 1960's Oxford AlNiCo 6X9 I pulled from a PA cab found by the side of the road and a Russell AlNiCo 12-incher I got for free(buddy pulled it from a mono-console unit). Puts big bucks 'vintage spec' speakers TO SHAME! HA!! Including the plywood, glue, and screws the cab cost me about 5 bux. I've got a 1959 Jensen P15R ribbed cone gold-frame organ-pull speaker I'm gonna use when I build a new enclosure to turn this thing back into a combo amp.
Further note on the tubes(picture below): On the left is my matched pair of old-stock RCA 7591 power tubes(labeled: 3M Revere Wollensack) and on the right are the new-manufactured Electro-Harmonix 7591A's. Note the size difference. The EH tubes are a little louder and brighter, with an earlier breakup. With the same tone and volume settings on the amp and guitar, the old-stock RCA's were a touch quieter, and had a darker, more bass-heavy tone with less distortion. 436VDC on the plates, -22VDC grid bias, and .020A on the cathodes. The cathode reading was basically the same with the both the new and old tubes.
tubes: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...type=1&theater
cab: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...type=1&theater"If you can get the smoke back in the amp, it will work."
Comment
-
Originally posted by Enzo View PostThe amp sounds amazing? Then stop fixing it. DOn't worry that some voltage doesn't match a schematic."If you can get the smoke back in the amp, it will work."
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mr Johnny Birchwood View Post...why the current draw through the cathodes is so much lower than spec, and why the -biasVDC is so much lower than spec, so that I might improve my understanding for future projects and problems.
When the original readings were taken they were probably taken with a VTVM that had an analog meter and a 20% tolerance factor. And modern line voltage may have increased since the time the amp was designed, throwing another variable into the mix.
Often an amp could go through a number of circuit modifications and when the schematic was revised there could have been mistakes made in the printing.
And then there are the deliberate mistakes or omissions that some companies used to keep the real circuitry a trade secret.
Comment
-
This is all quite true. If i get a reading within 10-20% of spec I usually don't give it a second thought. If the dmm reading and spec are off by a factor of 2x or 4x and the amp works, then it makes me stop and think about it. I'm aware of the difference between the 117VAC line voltage in use when the amp was made and the 122VAC I read off my wall outlets. The thing works great, so no complaints. I just wonder if I made some other error somewhere and that the low grid bias and low cathode current draw mean that I am putting extra wear and tear on the tubes. The new EH 7591A's are only $40 a pair, but I don't want to trash my pair of old-stock RCA 7591's, that's all. Thanx for the insight."If you can get the smoke back in the amp, it will work."
Comment
-
Hey Mr. Johnny,
I've got a Gemini6 I'm working on and have the same issue, no schematic with voltages. I'm wondering how you biased the amp. I'm thinking of adding a couple of 1 ohm resistors off the power tubes to ground to allow an easy bias method. Also I'm wondering if you used 500v caps for the filters, Joe's schematic calls for 600V 80mfd (i'm assuming 2-40's tied together). Do you have the info from ampeg in a form you could email me?? davo@clear.net
Thanks
Dave
Originally posted by Mr Johnny Birchwood View PostThanks guys! I just got the schematic from Ampeg Tech Support. It doesn't have all the voltages but it has enough to make some progress I hope. The hammond A-100(that's a 6V6/12AX7/12AU7 chassis) power tranny is nearly spot on for this application. Filter cap voltages are within 1-2% of spec. I have 318v on the plate of the pentode section of the drive tube(the 6u8/6gh8 I swapped for the 7199) and the schematic calls for 125v. Fixing that should help. The power tube plate voltage is 426vdc with a -50vdc bias. The schematic doesn't give plate voltages for the power tubes, but the value I show is within the range I would expect for a 7591A(360-420VDC) I will post an update when I have the amp closer to spec V's.
PS--anybody have experience with the 6u8/6gh8 swap for the 7199? I have access to a good supply of these tubes. Got a 6an8 too that I can plug in. I want to get this thing working good before I drop in my pair of vintage RCA 7591's
Comment
-
davohilts,if you are looking for filter caps try fliptops.net they have "cap kits" that closely match the can and axial caps in the original.You can fit axial replacements for the can,but it takes some squeezing to get them to fit under the chassis.
Comment
-
Originally posted by davohilts View Postthanks for the tip!!!"If you can get the smoke back in the amp, it will work."
Comment
Comment