I am repairing a V1031 Vox amp and have a question in regard to the non-polar electros. The customer had replaced the output transistors as a way to restore the output signal on the amp. They installed those correctly and still had no significant output. I scoped out the signal path and discovered a bad C19 4uf non-polar electro and replaced it with a 10uf non-polar electro. This has restored the output signal and the amp sounds pretty good. The only problem now is turning the bass pot up creates a nasty overdrive distortion. It is something in regard to a germanium fuzz sound, but it is not consistent making a pop here and there at lower settings on the bass pot. At first I thought it was the speaker, but it happens on any speaker. I remember seeing a strange effect on the scope that it is emanating from the preamp area that is triggered by turning up the bass pot as I was tracing out the signal path. I am looking at C9(1uf NP electro) as a possible culprit and I am thinking about just replacing all the electros in the amp for good measure.
Now would replacing the 4uf cap C19 with a 10uf cause any kind of foreseeable problem? I am having trouble finding crossover 4uf non-polar electro's and am wondering how exact my replacements need to be? Can I use other types of non-polar caps besides electros? There are only these two non-polar electros (C9 and C19) in the amp so kind of a pain ordering from this one place online that I found...>>> Capacitors
I have no idea what this amp is supposed to sound like, but reading about it I gather that it has a gainy type drive to the preamp. So, would that be a clipping germanium type gain sound? So as I increase the lower frequency response (bass pot) it is trying to work correctly, but perhaps the electro that sits right across the bass pot is going bad too. I measure the capacitance reading at 2.2uf where it supposed to be 1uf. At first the cap was not reading very well and was shooting around nanofarad readings. I wiggled the cap around and eventually got the 2.2uf reading. I did not have time to recheck the signal path at that point, but I am pretty sure these electros are all on their way out, after all the amp was made in 1966. Thank you to anyone with some advice or insight that might have worked on these amps.
Here is a link to the v1081 as it is the same as the v1031, but one less speaker.
http://music-electronics-forum.com/a...y-ii-v1081.pdf
Now would replacing the 4uf cap C19 with a 10uf cause any kind of foreseeable problem? I am having trouble finding crossover 4uf non-polar electro's and am wondering how exact my replacements need to be? Can I use other types of non-polar caps besides electros? There are only these two non-polar electros (C9 and C19) in the amp so kind of a pain ordering from this one place online that I found...>>> Capacitors
I have no idea what this amp is supposed to sound like, but reading about it I gather that it has a gainy type drive to the preamp. So, would that be a clipping germanium type gain sound? So as I increase the lower frequency response (bass pot) it is trying to work correctly, but perhaps the electro that sits right across the bass pot is going bad too. I measure the capacitance reading at 2.2uf where it supposed to be 1uf. At first the cap was not reading very well and was shooting around nanofarad readings. I wiggled the cap around and eventually got the 2.2uf reading. I did not have time to recheck the signal path at that point, but I am pretty sure these electros are all on their way out, after all the amp was made in 1966. Thank you to anyone with some advice or insight that might have worked on these amps.
Here is a link to the v1081 as it is the same as the v1031, but one less speaker.
http://music-electronics-forum.com/a...y-ii-v1081.pdf
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