I've owned a Fender blues deluxe since 1995 (tweed covered model not the hotrod) and have always had channel switching problems.
While playing the amp in either the clean or dirty channel, the channel light will dim to about half the normal brightness (or light if on clean channel) and no sound will come out of the amp. Over the years, I have had it in the shop on three occasions to get fixed and it would work fine for a few weeks.
I have pulled the circuit board and looked it over for bad solder joints and PCB damage, but haven't found anything.
I am thinking about setting the original PCB aside and wiring in a turret board (may a 57 bassman or deluxe type thing).
I'll loose channel switching, but the damn thing has never worked and has been sitting in the corner for 2 years.
I have a good chassis, speaker, enclosure and transformer i would just need to add the circuit.
What do you guys think? Should I try to get the original pcb up to snuff or is it time to cut my losses and start anew?
Although I've never built a tube amp from scratch, i have made a few successful modifications over the years. I have proto-typed solidstate circuits and micro-controller circuits, so I'm not a complete noob.
I'm not a purist who thinks all PCB boards are bad. I just think the one I have is bad.
Any help or thoughts are appreciated
Steve
While playing the amp in either the clean or dirty channel, the channel light will dim to about half the normal brightness (or light if on clean channel) and no sound will come out of the amp. Over the years, I have had it in the shop on three occasions to get fixed and it would work fine for a few weeks.
I have pulled the circuit board and looked it over for bad solder joints and PCB damage, but haven't found anything.
I am thinking about setting the original PCB aside and wiring in a turret board (may a 57 bassman or deluxe type thing).
I'll loose channel switching, but the damn thing has never worked and has been sitting in the corner for 2 years.
I have a good chassis, speaker, enclosure and transformer i would just need to add the circuit.
What do you guys think? Should I try to get the original pcb up to snuff or is it time to cut my losses and start anew?
Although I've never built a tube amp from scratch, i have made a few successful modifications over the years. I have proto-typed solidstate circuits and micro-controller circuits, so I'm not a complete noob.
I'm not a purist who thinks all PCB boards are bad. I just think the one I have is bad.
Any help or thoughts are appreciated
Steve
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