Greetings...
I scored a used Carvin Legacy last month for a very good price. Now, either because it was defective when I bought it or it suffered some damage due to some tube substitution errors that I made, I am having trouble with it....
The symptom is that the gain channel doesn't. It used to have several tons of gain on tap and now it has a couple of ounces. The clean channel seems to be fine. I had tried substituting some lower gain tubes in the V1 and V2 positions to see how it sounded. These substitutions included two 12AU7s. This was a mistake, as after running the numbers on the circuit, 12AU7s could overdissipate the plate resistors on the first four stages.
I open the amp and expected to find some or all of these out of spec. They are not. However, there were issues. First, 4 out of the 5 preamp tubes read "Replace" on my little emissions tube tester. One of the four output tubes also read in the "Replace" range. After getting good tubes in, I ran a DC voltage check. Rail and plate voltages for all but one of the gain stages were nominal with respect to the schematic (http://www.carvinmuseum.com/pdf/amps...gacy%20Amp.pdf). The plate voltage for V2B measured about 100 Volts too high. This is despite the fact that the plate and cathode resistors measured nominally.
I ran a 1KHz sine wave into the amp and the first gain stage (V1B) managed a gain in the 40's, which I would expect. The second gain stage's (V1A) gain was 0.3 and the third gain stage's (V2B) gain was about 4. Clearly these are not what one would expect.
Thinking that I might be looking at one or more leaking coupling caps, I measured the DC voltage at the grids at idle. While not zero, they were less than 10mV. I measured these with the tubes in the sockets. After a little research I think should have does the measurements without the tube in place which I will do.
I also did a continiuty check of the tube sockets to the PCB and these seemd fine. The solder connections for the sockets all look pretty solid.
Since this is a PCB amp, I did not want to start replacing parts willy-nilly as there is always the risk of wrecking it but good.
I also saw this is as a good learning experience, so is there a sensei out there who can offer some advice about what I could check next?
Thanks.
I scored a used Carvin Legacy last month for a very good price. Now, either because it was defective when I bought it or it suffered some damage due to some tube substitution errors that I made, I am having trouble with it....
The symptom is that the gain channel doesn't. It used to have several tons of gain on tap and now it has a couple of ounces. The clean channel seems to be fine. I had tried substituting some lower gain tubes in the V1 and V2 positions to see how it sounded. These substitutions included two 12AU7s. This was a mistake, as after running the numbers on the circuit, 12AU7s could overdissipate the plate resistors on the first four stages.
I open the amp and expected to find some or all of these out of spec. They are not. However, there were issues. First, 4 out of the 5 preamp tubes read "Replace" on my little emissions tube tester. One of the four output tubes also read in the "Replace" range. After getting good tubes in, I ran a DC voltage check. Rail and plate voltages for all but one of the gain stages were nominal with respect to the schematic (http://www.carvinmuseum.com/pdf/amps...gacy%20Amp.pdf). The plate voltage for V2B measured about 100 Volts too high. This is despite the fact that the plate and cathode resistors measured nominally.
I ran a 1KHz sine wave into the amp and the first gain stage (V1B) managed a gain in the 40's, which I would expect. The second gain stage's (V1A) gain was 0.3 and the third gain stage's (V2B) gain was about 4. Clearly these are not what one would expect.
Thinking that I might be looking at one or more leaking coupling caps, I measured the DC voltage at the grids at idle. While not zero, they were less than 10mV. I measured these with the tubes in the sockets. After a little research I think should have does the measurements without the tube in place which I will do.
I also did a continiuty check of the tube sockets to the PCB and these seemd fine. The solder connections for the sockets all look pretty solid.
Since this is a PCB amp, I did not want to start replacing parts willy-nilly as there is always the risk of wrecking it but good.
I also saw this is as a good learning experience, so is there a sensei out there who can offer some advice about what I could check next?
Thanks.
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