I have a Laney L30R series 2 combo here. It is ours. It came in once with little output, and customer declined the estimate. I had putzed with it off and on for a while. I was trying to use my L30R schematic, but it was clearly different. It does not SAY series 2 on it, but when I saw that schematic I knew I was there. Well I traced the signal over and over. It got to one stage and quit. Super low gain there. Pull dirt channel worked, though also reduced.
This amp uses a CMOS 4069 IC as amplifier stages. The CMOS logic is pretty much a little push-pull stage inside. I swapped out the IC, no help. I put the thing aside for better projects. I would get it out now and then, screw around and stuff it back under the bench.
Now that I am clearing my shop, and some friends are going to the Sweetwater gear fest next week, I thought I'd warm this thing up again. Hell, I am a smart guy, I OUGHT to be able to fix this simple freaking amp. I found myself sure enough right back at that IC. Signal comes into it through a resistor, resistor checks out, signal at one end but almost noen at the other, the end entering the IC.
I for some reason measured the resistance input to output of a couple CMOS gates in the IC. I measured that one as like 2000 ohms instead of mega. Maybe I better change the IC again. So I pulled it, decided to check the pads after the IC measured megaohms off the board. Sure enough, pins 1 and 2 were 2000 ohms apart. There is a feedback style gain control across those pins, schematic says 1 meg. Nope, turn it for about 0-2000 ohms.
So I did something I obviously had not done, I LOOKED at the pot, which had clearly printed on it 2.2k. Duh... it was a pull switch pot, as was the mids control. The schematic says mids control is 2.2k. And sure enough, there was my 1 meg pot in the mids position. The two pull switch pots had swapped places.
Well I hadn't done that. Cheeses K Ryst, I been tussling with this amp for several years in my off time, only to find it could never have worked.
Swap the pots, clean the controls, put the IC back in, sounds great. probably be lucky to get $50 for it.
Great, sell it, get the damned thing out of here. I am not sure if I ought to be mad at Laney or at myself. Prolly both.
This amp uses a CMOS 4069 IC as amplifier stages. The CMOS logic is pretty much a little push-pull stage inside. I swapped out the IC, no help. I put the thing aside for better projects. I would get it out now and then, screw around and stuff it back under the bench.
Now that I am clearing my shop, and some friends are going to the Sweetwater gear fest next week, I thought I'd warm this thing up again. Hell, I am a smart guy, I OUGHT to be able to fix this simple freaking amp. I found myself sure enough right back at that IC. Signal comes into it through a resistor, resistor checks out, signal at one end but almost noen at the other, the end entering the IC.
I for some reason measured the resistance input to output of a couple CMOS gates in the IC. I measured that one as like 2000 ohms instead of mega. Maybe I better change the IC again. So I pulled it, decided to check the pads after the IC measured megaohms off the board. Sure enough, pins 1 and 2 were 2000 ohms apart. There is a feedback style gain control across those pins, schematic says 1 meg. Nope, turn it for about 0-2000 ohms.
So I did something I obviously had not done, I LOOKED at the pot, which had clearly printed on it 2.2k. Duh... it was a pull switch pot, as was the mids control. The schematic says mids control is 2.2k. And sure enough, there was my 1 meg pot in the mids position. The two pull switch pots had swapped places.
Well I hadn't done that. Cheeses K Ryst, I been tussling with this amp for several years in my off time, only to find it could never have worked.
Swap the pots, clean the controls, put the IC back in, sounds great. probably be lucky to get $50 for it.
Great, sell it, get the damned thing out of here. I am not sure if I ought to be mad at Laney or at myself. Prolly both.
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