Well, replaced the zeners and no difference. I'm about ready to throw this thing.
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Marshall Valvestate VS65R Static
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OK, so the noise is before CON1, so in the preamp. The noise stays when the tube is gone, so it is after the tube. We have it isolated to that section of the amp.
Run a cord from the FX send to some other amp for a listen. is the static on the FX send?
\From the tube, which you can leave out for now, the signal goes through two sets of tone controls, selected them by IC5. That is the preamp out on that page. On the next page the preamp out signal branches: one through R55 to the FX loop, and the other the loop dry bypass to VR10. The FX return comes back through IC7b then to the other end of VR10. VR10 then is the dry/effects mix control. The output of that IC then goes through IC7c and on to the power amp. Sounds convoluted, but it is a pretty easy path to follow.
So isolate the problem. Is it on the FX send? If so, the source is before that. FX send clean? OK get out a clip wire and ground it. Use the other end to ground the signal path at various points. Pin 5 looks like is the output of IC5. Ground that a moment, does it kill the noise? If so the noise is before that, if no effect, the noise is after. How about the wiper of VR10 - or either end of R59, ground that a moment, noise or not? After IC7, find the junction of C10 and R16, and ground that a moment, noise or not?Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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It comes out the headphones because they are powered from the speaker wires. So we would be surprised if the phones were not affected.
Could it still be those ceramic capacitors?Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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That's right.
Then move on to IC7b and IC7c. Try grounding pins 1,2,3,6,7 and report back what kills the noise.
There's one problem with grounding pins - if you don't know the power supply is clean, when you ground the output of the last IC in the signal path the noise will stop. But you won't know whether this is a bad IC or bad power rail. That's why you need to ensure your supply is clean at the outset.
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OK.
When using a ground wire like this, it may ADD some new hum or noise, but the only thing we care about is whether it kills the original noise. I expect it to make hum and stuff in the process.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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If grounding IC7 pin7 kills the noise, this tells you that the noise is on or before that pin, so the components that follow it are most likely OK.
Typically op-amps can go noisy. But again, an op-amp only has a limited capacity for supply noise rejection and in most cases need a ripple-free supply. Whilst I still suspect IC7, The fault occurred after you changed components in the PSU, so be prepared for that to be the root of your problem. If there's noise on your supply - or the IC is failing - grounding pin 7 will kill the noise either way.
Ideally find someone with a scope to check the supply rails, or beg/borrow/buy a multimeter set to AC to see if there's anything obvious.
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