I'm re-tubing a Rivera Fandango 55 for a friend. He complained of it not "sounding right" and not clean when it should be clean. I immediately thought it was tired tubes, so we ordered a set of new production Mullards (both 12ax7s and EL34's) and a JAN/GE 5751 for V1 to tame the gain a bit.
There is a definite grit/sparse static in the background when playing a note. If you're not playing, there's no sparse static. As soon as you pluck a string, the static/popping comes back and fades off as the note fades off. It's not extremely loud, some people might not even notice unless someone mentioned it, but it's definitely there. Additionally, when switching the amp off off standby (to fully on), it makes a ~1.5 second reverby Woosh/static sound that almost sounds like you gave the reverb tank a hard wack.
Well, I popped the new tubes in and the issue is still there. I've admittedly not re-biased the amp yet, but I doubt the bias would be the culprit, since it existed with the old tubes. I suppose the bias could be off for both sets of tubes. There is no apparent redplating or arcing of any sort.
I should mention that I was also asked to repair a loose input jack from a forward fall with the cord plugged in which bent the input jack a bit. I pulled out the input jack board, and tweaked everything back into place, and seems to be back to normal. I can't imagine a shorted or open jack would cause such symptoms though.
Could caps of some sort cause this issue? Any other ideas?
Thanks!
There is a definite grit/sparse static in the background when playing a note. If you're not playing, there's no sparse static. As soon as you pluck a string, the static/popping comes back and fades off as the note fades off. It's not extremely loud, some people might not even notice unless someone mentioned it, but it's definitely there. Additionally, when switching the amp off off standby (to fully on), it makes a ~1.5 second reverby Woosh/static sound that almost sounds like you gave the reverb tank a hard wack.
Well, I popped the new tubes in and the issue is still there. I've admittedly not re-biased the amp yet, but I doubt the bias would be the culprit, since it existed with the old tubes. I suppose the bias could be off for both sets of tubes. There is no apparent redplating or arcing of any sort.
I should mention that I was also asked to repair a loose input jack from a forward fall with the cord plugged in which bent the input jack a bit. I pulled out the input jack board, and tweaked everything back into place, and seems to be back to normal. I can't imagine a shorted or open jack would cause such symptoms though.
Could caps of some sort cause this issue? Any other ideas?
Thanks!
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