Got a TSL100 in that I worked on about 3 years ago. It originally had the dreaded bias drift problem and I fixed it up by hacking the main board apart and relocating the bias components on a separate custom etched high quality G10 board. Since then the amp has served it's owner well for quite a number of years and he uses it constantly in live performances and recording... he just loves the thing... crazy eh? well.. each to their own.
He brought it back to my shop earlier today with a strange complaint which was: The crunch and lead channels sound a bit subdued and he can't shut the reverb off on either of them but the clean channel works O.K. He said he had a little mind lapse and put a 16 ohm load on a 4 ohm setting and felt that he damaged the amp that way. I assured him that he probably did not hurt the power section with that little mistake and anyway this channel dependent problem has nothing to do with the output section.
I put it on the amp bench, hooked it up and did a little examination of the power section and everything is fine there as I expected. I started looking for his problem and I found one but not what he stated. With the volumes and gains all at zero and a test signal injected into the input I get a little output from the clean channel... I don't think that's right. When I switch to the crunch channel I get no signal as I would expect but when I switch to the lead channel I get a considerable amount of output. At this point I stopped my preliminary examination (because it's getting late) and figured I would throw this out to the brain trust and see if anyone has experienced this behavior and has any ideas or theories. I have not got around to checking this reverb problem because this initial finding needs to be sorted out first and is most probably directly related to it.
He brought it back to my shop earlier today with a strange complaint which was: The crunch and lead channels sound a bit subdued and he can't shut the reverb off on either of them but the clean channel works O.K. He said he had a little mind lapse and put a 16 ohm load on a 4 ohm setting and felt that he damaged the amp that way. I assured him that he probably did not hurt the power section with that little mistake and anyway this channel dependent problem has nothing to do with the output section.
I put it on the amp bench, hooked it up and did a little examination of the power section and everything is fine there as I expected. I started looking for his problem and I found one but not what he stated. With the volumes and gains all at zero and a test signal injected into the input I get a little output from the clean channel... I don't think that's right. When I switch to the crunch channel I get no signal as I would expect but when I switch to the lead channel I get a considerable amount of output. At this point I stopped my preliminary examination (because it's getting late) and figured I would throw this out to the brain trust and see if anyone has experienced this behavior and has any ideas or theories. I have not got around to checking this reverb problem because this initial finding needs to be sorted out first and is most probably directly related to it.
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