Do you guys with shops use a work order or service order of some type? I'm trying not to re-invent the wheel here. Do you have a written checklist to work from when an amp comes in the shop? I'm not a custom builder nor do I work on a ton of amps like some of you do (I have a day job) but I have been working on several lately and would like to get more organized. I use Open Office but an Excel or Word format would work as well. I just want to make sure I'm not forgetting anything, especially since I seem to be getting the weird, oddball fixes that other people give up on.
Just the other day I "fixed" a Marshall Haze that had a screw floating around on the circuit board and happened to be stuck under a power resistor when I discovered it. The original complaint was that it dropped volume after a short time and this could obviously do that if it touched the right components. The bias was also way off on one tube even though it has all original tubes. It as been operating perfectly since, I've put around 12-14 hours on it since going through it and it works and sounds great.
Just the other day I "fixed" a Marshall Haze that had a screw floating around on the circuit board and happened to be stuck under a power resistor when I discovered it. The original complaint was that it dropped volume after a short time and this could obviously do that if it touched the right components. The bias was also way off on one tube even though it has all original tubes. It as been operating perfectly since, I've put around 12-14 hours on it since going through it and it works and sounds great.
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