Originally posted by olddawg
View Post
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Kustom K200A.4
Collapse
X
-
-
OK. Back at this one again...I had ordered in some Zener diodes....15V, 18V and 20V...I installed the 15V zeners and behold...The boost and clipper ckt worked....So. seeing as these Zeners are connected to the 23V supplies, I decided to install the 20V zeners....when I did that, The boost and clipper ckts worked but , I did notice that when the clipper ckt is maxed out, there is noise there...and this noise is there with the 15V zeners as well.... I have been told before that this circuit did not sound very good when on max....Is that true??? and when using the tremolo/vibrato function, there is a fairly noticeable hum present which is not there with the 15V zeners installed....and, I am not familiar as to how these amps are actually supposed to sound as I have never used or heard them before.....any thoughts, comments, etc welcome.....
Comment
-
Originally posted by bsco View PostThe boost and clipper ckts worked but , I did notice that when the clipper ckt is maxed out, there is noise there...and this noise is there with the 15V zeners as well.... I have been told before that this circuit did not sound very good when on max....Is that true???
Originally posted by bsco View Post....and when using the tremolo/vibrato function, there is a fairly noticeable hum present which is not there with the 15V zeners installed....
The amp originally had two 24 volt power supplies, somebody removed them and replaced them with two 10 volt supplies. Just fix the two supplies to 20 or 24 volts and move on.
The Zener supplies will need filtering on the output to help stabilize the voltages. You may need to increase the values of the caps if any are installed in there.
This is a fairly well designed guitar amp that was popular back in the day. This is the model that John Fogerty of CCR used for all of those big hit records. It shouldn't be any more noisy or any more hummy than any other amp from that time period.
First make it work and then tweak things if it's needed to make it sound better.
Comment
-
Originally posted by 52 Bill View PostWhat sort of noise? The clipper is a fuzz tone. As it uses the signal from the preamp, it works best when the channel volume is turned up a little.
Exactly what voltages are the two Zeners producing for the preamp power supplies, +&-20 volts? How much filtering is there on the two low voltage Zener supplies?
The amp originally had two 24 volt power supplies, somebody removed them and replaced them with two 10 volt supplies. Just fix the two supplies to 20 or 24 volts and move on.
The Zener supplies will need filtering on the output to help stabilize the voltages. You may need to increase the values of the caps if any are installed in there.
This is a fairly well designed guitar amp that was popular back in the day. This is the model that John Fogerty of CCR used for all of those big hit records. It shouldn't be any more noisy or any more hummy than any other amp from that time period.
First make it work and then tweak things if it's needed to make it sound better.
Thanks for the reply.....
Comment
-
Let me insert my common comment. Others here will be bored to death with it by now, but it's valid.
When you're resurrecting something like this, replace all the electrolytic caps before you start trying to debug.
The K200s were a late-60s kind of thing, so the caps in it are over 40 years old. Electros may last a long time if they're well taken care of, powered up every week or so, not exposed to heat, and you 're just plain lucky. They eventually rot into uselessness no matter what you do.
Electros often bypass biasing elements, and this can throw off the bias point of circuits that otherwise work just fine. IMHO, it's a good investment of your time to replace them all before any significant troubleshooting and tracing, and a waste of time if you find a bad cap, get it "fixed" and then have another cap fail in a week.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by R.G. View PostLet me insert my common comment. Others here will be bored to death with it by now, but it's valid.
When you're resurrecting something like this, replace all the electrolytic caps before you start trying to debug.
The K200s were a late-60s kind of thing, so the caps in it are over 40 years old. Electros may last a long time if they're well taken care of, powered up every week or so, not exposed to heat, and you 're just plain lucky. They eventually rot into uselessness no matter what you do.
Electros often bypass biasing elements, and this can throw off the bias point of circuits that otherwise work just fine. IMHO, it's a good investment of your time to replace them all before any significant troubleshooting and tracing, and a waste of time if you find a bad cap, get it "fixed" and then have another cap fail in a week.
Cheers.
P.S. That transformer tester you had posted on line works out great...I have used it a few times since I had found it with great results.....Thank you very much....
Comment
-
Originally posted by bsco View PostI noticed that the majority of caps in here are orange disc shaped caps which are polarized.
the trem/vib function works great at 15V but when trying to increase that voltage up to 20V, then this function produces a hum just with the function turned on....and this hum will be "In Time" with whatever way the speed and intensity controls are set...keep the voltage at 15 and it sounds great....if filter caps in this circuitry were the problem, then wouldn't it also produce this hum at 15V as well???
When you check schemos against the actual circuit you have, let us know which schemo applies and I can help with sorting out which cap is electro and which isn't.
The owner gave me another set of schematics.....now I have two sets...one with plus and minus 8V supplies and the other with 23V supplies....I am going to have to go through these to see exactly which ones apply to this unit....this could be part of my problem.
P.S. That transformer tester you had posted on line works out great...I have used it a few times since I had found it with great results.....Thank you very much....Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
Comment
-
Originally posted by R.G. View Post?? I don't know of any electrolytic caps that are disc shaped. The only common disc shaped caps are ceramic, and those are not polarized. That confuses me. All the polarized caps I know of are either cylindrical if aluminum electros, or rounded-blob for epoxy-dipped tantalum.
Electros are used as much more than filter caps. In most if not all solid state stuff, they're used for signal coupling, emitter bypassing and sometimes helping with feedback networks. It is possible that electros are behind the issues with trem here. Or not. But there's no good way to tell until you eliminate the possibility, and replacing them all is the same amount of work or less than isolating whether it's an electrolytic cap causing the problem.
When you check schemos against the actual circuit you have, let us know which schemo applies and I can help with sorting out which cap is electro and which isn't.
Yep. That will be very important!
You're very welcome. Glad I could help.
Cheers
Comment
-
Originally posted by bsco View PostOk R.G. The schematics for the piggy back boards for the reverb and tremolo/vib function are P302A and P302B...and it shows the B+ line as 23V....I am going to take a couple of pics and post when I get back in...Have to run an errand.......will be in touch...
Cheers
We already proved by the board numbers that this is a K200A-4 amp. The power supplies for the preamps and for the switching are supposed to be plus and minus 23 volts dc.
We also know that the previous tech had removed the two low voltage regulator boards and replaced them with a power resistor and Zener diode to set the voltages at 10 volts. Maybe he thought that because the newer version K200B amps used + and - 8 volt supplies that this one should too. I don't know why some people do the things that they do.
The orange disc caps are actually tantalum caps. Kustom used a lot of tantalums in all of their amps, some were orange, some black. I'm certain that they all need to be replaced, but for now fix the real problems and then upgrade.
Comment
-
Originally posted by 52 Bill View PostThis will be my last post on this thread.
We already proved by the board numbers that this is a K200A-4 amp. The power supplies for the preamps and for the switching are supposed to be plus and minus 23 volts dc.
We also know that the previous tech had removed the two low voltage regulator boards and replaced them with a power resistor and Zener diode to set the voltages at 10 volts. Maybe he thought that because the newer version K200B amps used + and - 8 volt supplies that this one should too. I don't know why some people do the things that they do.
The orange disc caps are actually tantalum caps. Kustom used a lot of tantalums in all of their amps, some were orange, some black. I'm certain that they all need to be replaced, but for now fix the real problems and then upgrade.
Comment
-
A lot of tants are yellow, but they also can be orange or blue or puke green or brown... I don't think of color, I ID them by their shape. The ones I have seen over the years tended to be little round blobs, tear-shaped.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Enzo View PostA lot of tants are yellow, but they also can be orange or blue or puke green or brown... I don't think of color, I ID them by their shape. The ones I have seen over the years tended to be little round blobs, tear-shaped.
Cheers
Comment
-
Originally posted by bsco View PostAnybody here have any experience with this head?? It is original....of course it needs a good cleanup.....pots and jacks...etc...tremolo and reverb work...but there is a Selective Boost circuit and a clipper circuit.....I guess the boost selection will increase overdrive which then can be controlled by the Boost volume........this does not do anything so I have a problem there......but what about this clipper circuit......what exactly is it's function? Is it used to manipulate high freq content in some way?? any info greatly appreciated......
Cheers,
Bernie
Comment
-
Originally posted by Downpour04 View Post
Do you happen to still have this amp?
Cheers
- Likes 1
Comment
Comment