I have a 1971 Super Reverb. It has the fibre eyelet board. My understanding is over time these boards can become conductive.
I hooked up my DMM to the amp when live, and took several DC Voltage readings at various locations on the board. I touched the
red probe to the fibre board only, other lead to mains ground. I got readings approaching 400 mV at most locations. Is this
considered excessive or acceptable?
The amp is quiet. The only symptom is the slower ramp up time when engaging vibrato. I have rebuilt the vibrato circuit completely
in an effort to fix. I realize its not ideal, but thought I'd try anyway. I'm not even sure a conductive board could cause a slight delay
in vibrato engagement. Just thought I'd check the board and report my findings.
Thanks, Keith
I hooked up my DMM to the amp when live, and took several DC Voltage readings at various locations on the board. I touched the
red probe to the fibre board only, other lead to mains ground. I got readings approaching 400 mV at most locations. Is this
considered excessive or acceptable?
The amp is quiet. The only symptom is the slower ramp up time when engaging vibrato. I have rebuilt the vibrato circuit completely
in an effort to fix. I realize its not ideal, but thought I'd try anyway. I'm not even sure a conductive board could cause a slight delay
in vibrato engagement. Just thought I'd check the board and report my findings.
Thanks, Keith
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