I have a Fender Sidekick 25 Reverb. The output was low with a ground noise. I checked all the connections on the board. It's very clean. I replaced the IC's and the 3 Transistors on the Heat Sink Plate. Not any better. The headphone out and preamp out to another amp do the same thing. I do have the schematic. Any help would be great.
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List all the troubleshooting you have done on the amp with more details. Right now it appears that you checked all the connections on the board. Explain more here by exactly what you did? For example, did you do any troubleshooting on the speaker or anything else. Faulty IC chips passing signal will have a 120hz signal hum as they are located in the preamp side of things. Did you test any voltages before pulling out the IC chips? And what are those 3 transistors you replaced on the heat sink? Was wondering if you tested those before pulling them to replace? Just need some more info to get the ball rolling.
Edit: Good luck Also, I get that you tested the amp through the preamp out/headphone jack, so it is probably not the speaker. But is there any DC voltage on the speaker leads or anything like that?
There is also the right schematic here from Jazz P Bass for anyone's reference...
http://music-electronics-forum.com/t17821/Attached FilesWhen the going gets weird... The weird turn pro!
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Yeah you can 'check' the speaker leads.
If there is any voltage there (Vdc) you have a power amp problem.
I still recommend checking the actual power supply.
The voltages are not marked on the schematic.
But working from it we can pretty well guess Point A & B will be about +30 Vdc & - 30Vdc.
C & D will be about + - 22 Vdc.
And E & F will be + - 16 Vdc.Attached Files
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It is a solid state amp, it does not require a load. It is only the tube amps that MUST have a load.
NO DC on the speaker but lots of hum? My first suspects are the main filter caps, did you resolder them? You should, even if they "look OK".Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Uhm...
See that little rectangular box around the red & black wires.
The one that says 'ac'?
That is the power transfomer secondary.
The middle pad is the grounded center tap.
Vac.
The small square thingy on 4 legs is the bridge rectifier.
D15.
The one corner is marked '+'.
That is your B+ voltage. (TP A)
Vdc.
The rectifier legs are set up as: +, AC, -, AC.
So the B- (TP B) would be directly across from the B+ leg.
Measure those two points.
Vdc.Last edited by Jazz P Bass; 09-05-2012, 11:54 PM.
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