Hey guys hope everyone is doing well.
I've got this Marshall 1959 SLP from ebay that was just completely miswired with cold/loose solder joints and I believe the output transformer was even miswired originally. It also had a few bad parts in it and to put it generally, it was in really bad shape.
Anyway my brother and I have been working on this amp on and off these past few months just swapping things out and cleaning it up trying to get it into a working condition. As it stands now it sounds fine and works fine except for one problem, the output volume is considerably lowered. Now my brother has a working 100 watt SLP so I have a pretty good idea as to how loud this guy is supposed to actually be. In my opinion it seems that this ebay SLP at a volume of 6 is equivalent to the working SLP's volume of ~2. BIG DIFFERENCE (although the tone is good). Another symptom to note is that with the volume on zero and no guitar signal applied we would get a light motorboating sound coming out of the speakers.
I think we've narrowed this down to a problem with oscillation after the phase inverter tube before the presence knob. The reason I say this is because if we were to disconnect the NFB loop then the tone changes (obviously) but the volume jumps back up to appropriate levels and the amp would motoboat even with the other pre-amp tubes removed.
We tried measuring the voltage on the PI plates and they seemed to be okay (note: 1 side stayed a constant voltage while the other would oscillate ~4 volts every 4 seconds)
We also swapped out the PI snub cap from a 47pf to a 100pf. This made the motorboating go away but didn't touch the volume issue, if anything it made it slightly quieter. I'm starting to think we have a bad PI socket. What do you guys think/suggest? Anything we can try to help narrow down the source of our oscillation?
FYI:Multiple sets of tubes where used (power and pre) and the problem stays with the amp, we also don't have an oscilloscope =( .
I've got this Marshall 1959 SLP from ebay that was just completely miswired with cold/loose solder joints and I believe the output transformer was even miswired originally. It also had a few bad parts in it and to put it generally, it was in really bad shape.
Anyway my brother and I have been working on this amp on and off these past few months just swapping things out and cleaning it up trying to get it into a working condition. As it stands now it sounds fine and works fine except for one problem, the output volume is considerably lowered. Now my brother has a working 100 watt SLP so I have a pretty good idea as to how loud this guy is supposed to actually be. In my opinion it seems that this ebay SLP at a volume of 6 is equivalent to the working SLP's volume of ~2. BIG DIFFERENCE (although the tone is good). Another symptom to note is that with the volume on zero and no guitar signal applied we would get a light motorboating sound coming out of the speakers.
I think we've narrowed this down to a problem with oscillation after the phase inverter tube before the presence knob. The reason I say this is because if we were to disconnect the NFB loop then the tone changes (obviously) but the volume jumps back up to appropriate levels and the amp would motoboat even with the other pre-amp tubes removed.
We tried measuring the voltage on the PI plates and they seemed to be okay (note: 1 side stayed a constant voltage while the other would oscillate ~4 volts every 4 seconds)
We also swapped out the PI snub cap from a 47pf to a 100pf. This made the motorboating go away but didn't touch the volume issue, if anything it made it slightly quieter. I'm starting to think we have a bad PI socket. What do you guys think/suggest? Anything we can try to help narrow down the source of our oscillation?
FYI:Multiple sets of tubes where used (power and pre) and the problem stays with the amp, we also don't have an oscilloscope =( .
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