I have a Princeton Reverb SF that I just put back to original specs. I had done the longtail PI conversion a long time ago and didn't like it. So the chassis sat on a shelf for the last 9 years or so. I finished it today and fired it up. I brought the volume up slowly and everything works, tone stack, reverb, vibrato. As soon as I hit a cord, it went into a low frequency oscillation, and nothing I did stopped it until I turned it off. I'd heard of "motorboating" but never actually experienced it. The filter cap is my main suspect, as everything I've read say motorboating is usually caused by the PS filters, and hitting the bass strings definately set it off. And, after I thought about it a minute, it does sound kinda like a motor boat. I double checked all my wiring and it is on the money. All tubes were tested in another working amp.
I replaced the original filter cap with a Mallory replacement (made in Mexico) about 10 years ago, but as I said the chassis has sat unused in a hot garage for 9 years. I've heard those Mexican made Mallory multi section caps were notoriously unreliable. Before I buy a replacement from AES, is there anything else that might cause this?
I replaced the original filter cap with a Mallory replacement (made in Mexico) about 10 years ago, but as I said the chassis has sat unused in a hot garage for 9 years. I've heard those Mexican made Mallory multi section caps were notoriously unreliable. Before I buy a replacement from AES, is there anything else that might cause this?
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