I have a couple of these that the red bias light will not go out even though the green bias light comes on. New matched tubes, all 220 ohm resistors are good, no bad sold joints on the tube sockets. Help?
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Ampeg SVT Classic Bias Light issue
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According to the manual the amp is under biased. I've never used or repaired one so I just looked it up Link below is the owners manual and includes biasing instruction.
http://www.ampeg.com/pdf/SVTCL_OM.pdf"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Ampeg problems
Originally posted by The Dude View PostWhat brand of matched tubes, where did you buy them, and do you own a bias probe?
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If you haven't checked the bias why are you questioning the red/green light condition? Have you twiddled the bias adjustments and just not been able to make the red light go out? The manual states that a red light AND a green light indicate an under biased state. It also indicates that the bias controls are interactive. This may be like the old SVT's where a bias and balance had to be achieved. In this light it's entirely possible to have the two push/pull power banks cattywhompus. This could make it tricky to get to a "green only" state on both banks. I didn't read the whole instruction but I inferred that there is more than one bias adjust mechanism. Both need to be right AND in sync in order to illuminate the green LED only."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Originally posted by Chuck H View PostIf you haven't checked the bias why are you questioning the red/green light condition? Have you twiddled the bias adjustments and just not been able to make the red light go out? The manual states that a red light AND a green light indicate an under biased state. It also indicates that the bias controls are interactive. This may be like the old SVT's where a bias and balance had to be achieved. In this light it's entirely possible to have the two push/pull power banks cattywhompus. This could make it tricky to get to a "green only" state on both banks. I didn't read the whole instruction but I inferred that there is more than one bias adjust mechanism. Both need to be right AND in sync in order to illuminate the green LED only.
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I would adjust bias to just where the green light comes on and then check each tube with your bias probe. It's my guess that one or more tubes will be drawing much more current than the rest. In my experience, these amps seem to be picky about tube matching- too much so IMO. This will cause the LED problem you describe. It seems these days that matched tubes for some companies means that they are all packaged in the same style boxes, so I don't necessarily trust that they are indeed matched. If you find that this is the case, you may be able to put all of the "higher current" tubes in one side and "lower current tubes in the other and match the + and - sides with the two bias controls. I've had success doing this in the past.Last edited by The Dude; 04-30-2015, 03:47 AM."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Having serviced many of these, I all too often find the small tubes in the power amp to be in the wrong sockets or even the wrong type. And when they are right, the symptom you report I often find is due to a bad 12AU7 driver tube.
There are three small tubes in the power amp. V1 is a 12AX7 and is the input stage and phase inverter. It is the tube closest to the SLAVE jack. V2 and V3 are 12AU7s, one is for the push side and the other for the pull side, as it were. They are located right behind the two bias controls. Make sure they are all the right types, and that they are stuck in the right holes.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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As I understand it, if any cathode is under about 15mA - no green LED. If any cathode is over about 30mA, the red LED lights. Saying that, if you are mismatched more than 15mA you won't be able to get to "green light only" condition.
Another reason to check each tube with the bias probe is to make sure all of the tubes are conducting. If you had a tube failure, it's possible that a resistor or something burnt and one tube is not working at all.
Edit: I should add that I've run into a few where the supposed 15mA range is a bit tighter than that.Last edited by The Dude; 04-30-2015, 04:20 AM."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostAs I understand it, if any cathode is under about 15mA - no green LED. If any cathode is over about 30mA, the red LED lights. Saying that, if you are mismatched more than 15mA you won't be able to get to "green light only" condition.
Another reason to check each tube with the bias probe is to make sure all of the tubes are conducting. If you had a tube failure, it's possible that a resistor or something burnt and one tube is not working at all.
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SVT biasing& bias lights
As Enzo had indicated, when you're NOT getting response in adjusting one side or the other with the bias pots, you could have a bad 12AU7. Or, possibly solder fractures on the bias pot terminals themselves. I service these amp often, and because the rear panel hardware is used to support that end of the main PCB in the chassis, I find solder fractures on the component leads....requiring de-solder and re-solder to restore them.
While the bias LED's are Very Handy, driven by the internal window-comparators, where GRN has it's window from 14.7mA thru 29.4mA, I'm normally setting my bias to around 22-24mA, by monitoring the current thru each tube's cathode resistors, found along the edge of the PCB on the Output Xfmr side, with two of the resistors parked 'inland' a bit, as seen in the photos below:
With the amp standing up on end, you're able to monitor the current thru all six power tubes, and it also facilitates juggling the tubes for best current balance on each half. In these photos, I had tack-soldered some eyelets on each of the cathode resistors so I could hang the probes in place for photo purposes...normally I'm just clipping the Gnd lead of the DMM on the bottom of the cathode resistors...just enough lead exposed on the component side to do that, and measuring on the solder pad for each of the cathodes, and jotting down the readings.
I've also had to repair the Window Comparator circuit before, finding bias adjustment was working fine, but NOT the LED circuit. Ive also got the amp powered thru a variac & power analyzer, so I can see change in AC Mains current/power as I adjust each side.
On other amps, I'll make use of my Compu-Bias Bias Probe meter & probes, but.....it's limited to 600V, which the SVT is beyond on it's plate voltage. Since the SVT-CL has discrete cathode resistors, I just make use of those.Last edited by nevetslab; 04-30-2015, 11:25 PM.Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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I re-tubed one of these a few months ago. Make sure the ribbon cable connections are good. Bias voltage goes through that cable and if I remember correctly, I had to re-solder those connections because a few of them were funky.--Jim
He's like a new set of strings... he just needs to be stretched a bit.
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Swap the left three and right three 6550s to see if the problem switches sides or stays put. If the red light switches, one of the tubes on the red side is iffy. If it stays put, swap the two 12AU7s and see if the problem switches sides or stays put. If the red light switches, the one on the bad side is bad.
If the problem never moves, listen to the other guys here :-)
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