I'm not much of an amp tech. I have Gerald Weber's DVD, but I'm still pretty weak on troubleshooting. I don't understand enough theory to really think through what's going on.
Let me tell you the amp's history so far. I bought the amp used at Guitar Center. It was super cheap and sounded AMAZING - someone had done some mods, but I think it was the first time they had been inside an amp. E.g. they had replaced C31 with a Sprague Atom, but they just clipped the legs of the old cap and soldered the new one to the old legs. Consequently, the solder joint between the old leg and the board failed and when the amp finally died on me, I located the problem by listening to the persistent tone coming from the cap (with no signal going into the amp).
So I replaced that cap with an F&T of similar value, plus the screen resistors, one of which had gone up in smoke. One of the tubes was also bad, and it bugged me that I don't know how to determine which failure was cause, and which was effect.
It just occurred to me that maybe I should have replaced all the caps? I read the test points on the big caps as follows:
C31 444v
C33 444v
C35 405v
C36 356v
I don't know what to make of that. It matches the general contour of relative values; does that say anything about the health of the caps?
The reason I'm worried about this is that the amp was acting kinda glitchy for a minute about a week and a half ago. I was doing my normal monday nite thing (hosting a jam - ughhhh) and in the opening set it started glitching and crackling. I flipped the power off and back on and it stopped acting up. I don't know what that does but I just know from experience that it stops that behavior sometimes.
So in general, if I replace one of those caps, should I replace them all? Are they like batteries, where one bad one takes the rest with them? At this point should I replace the one I put in a couple months ago? (Probably a couple hundred hours of playing time alongside the bad ones)
How can I determine what caused the glitch in my amp? How can I tell whether I'm right around the corner from another mid-show failure?
Let me tell you the amp's history so far. I bought the amp used at Guitar Center. It was super cheap and sounded AMAZING - someone had done some mods, but I think it was the first time they had been inside an amp. E.g. they had replaced C31 with a Sprague Atom, but they just clipped the legs of the old cap and soldered the new one to the old legs. Consequently, the solder joint between the old leg and the board failed and when the amp finally died on me, I located the problem by listening to the persistent tone coming from the cap (with no signal going into the amp).
So I replaced that cap with an F&T of similar value, plus the screen resistors, one of which had gone up in smoke. One of the tubes was also bad, and it bugged me that I don't know how to determine which failure was cause, and which was effect.
It just occurred to me that maybe I should have replaced all the caps? I read the test points on the big caps as follows:
C31 444v
C33 444v
C35 405v
C36 356v
I don't know what to make of that. It matches the general contour of relative values; does that say anything about the health of the caps?
The reason I'm worried about this is that the amp was acting kinda glitchy for a minute about a week and a half ago. I was doing my normal monday nite thing (hosting a jam - ughhhh) and in the opening set it started glitching and crackling. I flipped the power off and back on and it stopped acting up. I don't know what that does but I just know from experience that it stops that behavior sometimes.
So in general, if I replace one of those caps, should I replace them all? Are they like batteries, where one bad one takes the rest with them? At this point should I replace the one I put in a couple months ago? (Probably a couple hundred hours of playing time alongside the bad ones)
How can I determine what caused the glitch in my amp? How can I tell whether I'm right around the corner from another mid-show failure?
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