Greetings (is it polite/standard to start a new thread with this word? 1st question: 2nd grade english!)
Well, hello,
Introducing myself: a greenhorn when it comes to electronics. I can kinda read a schematic and kinda know what is the purpose of each component, so, I'm sorry in advance.
Yesterday I bought a VS100R Head and the correspondent speaker, the price was incredible not to buy. The seller told me the head had something wrong with it.
I dismounted it, cleaned it, and saw nothing. It was working: i could turn it on, and play guitar, but with a really low volume (emphasis on "really"), even with the volume knob at maximum. Oh, and in every channel (clean, distortion 1 and 2) it distorded.
I went searching for a solution online and found that usually, for this kind of problem, it is cold connections (bad soldering). So, I looked again, and in the power amp circuit it had some transistors lacking solder. I reinforced it, and now i have no guitar sound, just a hum that do not change if i change the knobs positions.
I opened it again and saw something that was there before i resoldered (i took pictures before and it was there already): a burded resistor, and perhaps, a dead transistor. The resistor was clearly burned, but the transistor just a "little", maybe because they are right next to each other, the burning sines on the transistor are just burning "facts" of the resistor. I changed the resistor for an equal valued one, and turned the amplifier on. It burned really quick (the new resistor). There is a shortcircuit somewhere. Viewing the schematics, could it be that the transistor is really dead and causing the resistor to burn? Everything else is looking as it was new. Transistor=T8, Resistor=R20
Well, hello,
Introducing myself: a greenhorn when it comes to electronics. I can kinda read a schematic and kinda know what is the purpose of each component, so, I'm sorry in advance.
Yesterday I bought a VS100R Head and the correspondent speaker, the price was incredible not to buy. The seller told me the head had something wrong with it.
I dismounted it, cleaned it, and saw nothing. It was working: i could turn it on, and play guitar, but with a really low volume (emphasis on "really"), even with the volume knob at maximum. Oh, and in every channel (clean, distortion 1 and 2) it distorded.
I went searching for a solution online and found that usually, for this kind of problem, it is cold connections (bad soldering). So, I looked again, and in the power amp circuit it had some transistors lacking solder. I reinforced it, and now i have no guitar sound, just a hum that do not change if i change the knobs positions.
I opened it again and saw something that was there before i resoldered (i took pictures before and it was there already): a burded resistor, and perhaps, a dead transistor. The resistor was clearly burned, but the transistor just a "little", maybe because they are right next to each other, the burning sines on the transistor are just burning "facts" of the resistor. I changed the resistor for an equal valued one, and turned the amplifier on. It burned really quick (the new resistor). There is a shortcircuit somewhere. Viewing the schematics, could it be that the transistor is really dead and causing the resistor to burn? Everything else is looking as it was new. Transistor=T8, Resistor=R20
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