Good afternoon from Cornwall. I am new here, but I have called in to pose a question regarding my little Fender Princeton '65 Reverb reissue amplifier. I purchased this about two and half years ago, so it is well out of warranty. Other than testing it briefly when I first had it, I have never used it because health issues prevented me from playing guitar. Just recently I have at last used it three times in all, for about an hour each time at very low volumes in my studio.
Last night I had been playing for about an hour when I noticed the amp smelled hot. Looking in the back I could see that both 6V6 power valves were red-plating (glowing anodes). I powered down and put the amp on my bench for investigation. With no signal applied, but the amp warmed through, I could just see the same problem, but when I turned up the vibrato intensity from zero it became much more obvious. The brightness of the red anode glow seemed to be directly related to the vibrato intensity setting.
So I stripped out the amp chassis and set it up with speaker connected and no input. Checking with my meter at TP16 (V5) I have 51mv rather than the 23mv specified by Fender for the bias setting, even with the bias trim pot R22 at its minimum setting. On TP17 (V6) I have 46mv. If I then bring up the vibrato intensity pot from zero to say 4 or 5, the reading at TP16 will climb to over 100mv and the anodes start glowing on V5 and V6.
Looking over the PC board I can see no obviously over-heated or burned components. The amp is still working fine and when you play through it there is no distortion or noticeable problem to the user. At this point I am stumped - any ideas would be most welcome.
Last night I had been playing for about an hour when I noticed the amp smelled hot. Looking in the back I could see that both 6V6 power valves were red-plating (glowing anodes). I powered down and put the amp on my bench for investigation. With no signal applied, but the amp warmed through, I could just see the same problem, but when I turned up the vibrato intensity from zero it became much more obvious. The brightness of the red anode glow seemed to be directly related to the vibrato intensity setting.
So I stripped out the amp chassis and set it up with speaker connected and no input. Checking with my meter at TP16 (V5) I have 51mv rather than the 23mv specified by Fender for the bias setting, even with the bias trim pot R22 at its minimum setting. On TP17 (V6) I have 46mv. If I then bring up the vibrato intensity pot from zero to say 4 or 5, the reading at TP16 will climb to over 100mv and the anodes start glowing on V5 and V6.
Looking over the PC board I can see no obviously over-heated or burned components. The amp is still working fine and when you play through it there is no distortion or noticeable problem to the user. At this point I am stumped - any ideas would be most welcome.
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