Hello!
I have a 1968 Fender Bassman that hums even with the volumes on zero.
It hums the same even with the phase inverter tube removed.
It's a low hum that's steady and sounds like a grounding issue.
It does have a new 3 wire AC cord installed.
The stand by switch and death cap are still in place and wired up!
Moving the polarity switch makes no difference.
It has all new Sprague caps in the power section.
I checked the polarity on them.
I checked for loose wires, solder joints, etc.
I checked to make sure the heater wires on the power tube sockets go from pin 7 to pin 7.
When switching on from standby the hum is momentarily very loud and then goes much lower.
The Mica caps that go to V2 are microphonic. Strange?
I switched power tubes from a 70 Bassman that has absolutely no hum and the hum did not change.
Adjusting the bias raised and lowered the hum, but when the hum was gone the amp was all farty sounding, not a good distortion at all. lol
Interesting is that using a Variac, the hum increases with changes in the voltage. As soon as I stop adjusting the voltage the hum dies back down. Something inside is hating voltage changes.
Holding my guitar 12 inches or closer to the amp head significant increases the hum.
It's a great sounding head besides the hum.
There is evidence of a power cap having failed under the cover. There is also evidence of a fire under the inside power tube socket. The green heater wires are scorched and new resisters seem to be in place for both tube sockets.
The bias adjustment seems to be of the silverface variety as I lose power to the tubes when turned down.
It just sounds like there's a grounding issue somewhere in the power section.
Any ideas anyone? I'm a novice at this but I do have a multimeter, Variac, bais probs and 20 years experience in the aerospace field.
I have a 1968 Fender Bassman that hums even with the volumes on zero.
It hums the same even with the phase inverter tube removed.
It's a low hum that's steady and sounds like a grounding issue.
It does have a new 3 wire AC cord installed.
The stand by switch and death cap are still in place and wired up!
Moving the polarity switch makes no difference.
It has all new Sprague caps in the power section.
I checked the polarity on them.
I checked for loose wires, solder joints, etc.
I checked to make sure the heater wires on the power tube sockets go from pin 7 to pin 7.
When switching on from standby the hum is momentarily very loud and then goes much lower.
The Mica caps that go to V2 are microphonic. Strange?
I switched power tubes from a 70 Bassman that has absolutely no hum and the hum did not change.
Adjusting the bias raised and lowered the hum, but when the hum was gone the amp was all farty sounding, not a good distortion at all. lol
Interesting is that using a Variac, the hum increases with changes in the voltage. As soon as I stop adjusting the voltage the hum dies back down. Something inside is hating voltage changes.
Holding my guitar 12 inches or closer to the amp head significant increases the hum.
It's a great sounding head besides the hum.
There is evidence of a power cap having failed under the cover. There is also evidence of a fire under the inside power tube socket. The green heater wires are scorched and new resisters seem to be in place for both tube sockets.
The bias adjustment seems to be of the silverface variety as I lose power to the tubes when turned down.
It just sounds like there's a grounding issue somewhere in the power section.
Any ideas anyone? I'm a novice at this but I do have a multimeter, Variac, bais probs and 20 years experience in the aerospace field.
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