Hello and thanks for reading.
1999 Hot Rod Deluxe.
I fixed and a different problem and verified functionality with testing (replacing switching jfets for More Drive feature) and was about to button this amp up for a friend, when I decided to "improve" an area of concern.
The circuit board also had the notorious 16v +/- supply dropper resistor blackening, and the 330 ohm resistors were tight to the board, not helping things. I determined to help avert future problems there by lifting the resistors, but found that a previous tech had apparently used some of their lead-length to jump parts of the trace that had been lost. I opted to use wire, and the specific points where I used them was from R78 (330ohm) to R91 (10k), and from R79 (330ohm) to the neg lead of C42.
Now, unfortunately, I have oscillation in the Drive/More Drive Channels. Do any of you see where these jumps would cause it? I believe I have followed both the trace and schematic effectively.
The tone is low midrange, near a G#, second octave on a guitar.
Pulling v1 does not stop it, pulling v2 does.
The note of the oscillation drops several cents when turning the treble knob to one side.
No oscillation in the clean channel, not even apparent "bleed" when cranked.
I've found a couple of other threads elsewhere online recommending reflowing solder joints and testing power caps with a known good power cap - I tested all power caps and reflowed all joints in the preamp section. I also swapped around the preamp and PI tubes, but with no change. I found one thread with this exact problem as mine but the last post was "take it to a good service person".
I recognize that something may have been loosened during the numerous times moving the circuitboard out from "home" position and flipping it for soldering/testing etc, but I've not been able to find the culprit. I reflowed all solders on the tube connection multi-lead cables as well, and verified continuity from on both ends.
I have an oscilloscope that I plan to get out later this evening, but I may miss some areas of concern - my prior experience is with more simple circuits. I'd appreciate any suggestions in tracking this bugger down!
Thank you any help.
Jeff
1999 Hot Rod Deluxe.
I fixed and a different problem and verified functionality with testing (replacing switching jfets for More Drive feature) and was about to button this amp up for a friend, when I decided to "improve" an area of concern.
The circuit board also had the notorious 16v +/- supply dropper resistor blackening, and the 330 ohm resistors were tight to the board, not helping things. I determined to help avert future problems there by lifting the resistors, but found that a previous tech had apparently used some of their lead-length to jump parts of the trace that had been lost. I opted to use wire, and the specific points where I used them was from R78 (330ohm) to R91 (10k), and from R79 (330ohm) to the neg lead of C42.
Now, unfortunately, I have oscillation in the Drive/More Drive Channels. Do any of you see where these jumps would cause it? I believe I have followed both the trace and schematic effectively.
The tone is low midrange, near a G#, second octave on a guitar.
Pulling v1 does not stop it, pulling v2 does.
The note of the oscillation drops several cents when turning the treble knob to one side.
No oscillation in the clean channel, not even apparent "bleed" when cranked.
I've found a couple of other threads elsewhere online recommending reflowing solder joints and testing power caps with a known good power cap - I tested all power caps and reflowed all joints in the preamp section. I also swapped around the preamp and PI tubes, but with no change. I found one thread with this exact problem as mine but the last post was "take it to a good service person".
I recognize that something may have been loosened during the numerous times moving the circuitboard out from "home" position and flipping it for soldering/testing etc, but I've not been able to find the culprit. I reflowed all solders on the tube connection multi-lead cables as well, and verified continuity from on both ends.
I have an oscilloscope that I plan to get out later this evening, but I may miss some areas of concern - my prior experience is with more simple circuits. I'd appreciate any suggestions in tracking this bugger down!
Thank you any help.
Jeff
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