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AIDEAN MESIA 100 troubles with hum and reverb

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  • AIDEAN MESIA 100 troubles with hum and reverb

    Hi to all!

    A customer brought me an AIDEAN Mesia 100 Boogie clone to have a look over it.
    First I recognized was that someone made a Footswitch-Mod. A missing reverb-tank
    some minor fixings an a changed reverb-transformer.

    The thing would work fine and sound good if there were not the strange hum-problems.

    All gain and the two master turned down and the thing is quiet.
    Turning up the master-Vol makes the amp hum. (not a solid hum but some harsh, brizzle
    and disturbing sound)

    I added a new reverb-tank. I found Mesa MKII used a tank type 9AB2A1B so I took this model
    .
    Now noise is much stronger if you turn up the reverb.
    If I disconnect the INPUT of the tank the hum from the reverb stops. If I disconnect the OUTPUT the
    hum changes a bit but persists.

    I am rather confused with this thing. Not to mention there that I was unable to find a schematic or manual for this thing.
    The schematic of the Boogie MKII seems close but that does not help a bit...

    Any help, hint or suggestion is appreciated.

    Thx in advance and greetings from Austria

    Gerhard

  • #2
    The grounding scheme of reverb tanks varies according to model. Some have isolated connections, some have one or both connected to ground. You may have a ground loop caused by the reverb grounding - the 5th character of the model indicates the input and output are connected to chassis ground. Take a look to see if the ground connection to the folded steel tank can be experimentally lifted on the input connection. You still need both black/green leads connected to the drive transducer, though.

    A disconnected output can hum because the recovery stage is pretty high gain and the lead acts like an antenna - does it still hum with the reverb control turned off?

    The other thing that affects reverb hum is the tank orientation. If the recovery transducer is close to a radiated magnetic field (such as from a power transformer) it will pick up hum that gets amplified by the reverb recovery stage. Sometimes flipping the tank cures this.

    Comment


    • #3
      Thx for help,

      What I checked:

      reverb-tank connections:

      connected: IN / OUT -> hum
      disconnected IN / connected OUT-> No hum at all
      connected IN / disconnected OUT -> hum ++ (with shorted cable to the amp no hum)
      IN with open GND / connected OUT -> hum --
      connected IN / OUT with open GND -> hum

      The hum can be completely removed when turing down the reverb-control

      Comment


      • #4
        Your tests are showing a tank input issue.

        Attached is the MKII reverb circuit.

        MKii Reverb Circuit.pdf

        Is it close?

        Start with the B+ node at the 10K 2 watt resistor.
        Is there Vac ripple riding on it?

        Comment


        • #5
          Thx for the schematic!

          Without a layout of the AIDEAN it is nearly impossible to locate any part in this amp.
          Please see attached picture.

          Click image for larger version

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          My hope was, the problem is located anywhere, where you can find it without taking the whole thing apart.

          In addition I have to say the amp is rather noisy. When you turn up one of the master-volumes it hums too, but not so bad.

          Comment


          • #6
            It appears that your recovery stage is behaving normally.

            There's a way to test the tank drive circuit; it's a small power amp which will produce about 1/2 watt or so into an 8 Ohm load. pull the input to the tank and connect it to an 8 ohm speaker and you should hear the reverb drive signal when you play your guitar and turn the reverb control up. Not exactly hi-fi, but good enough to check for hum.

            Comment


            • #7
              Hi Mick

              it was just as you wrote. The reverb-tank I used had both sides grounded and this appeared to be the problem.
              Removing the ground on the input connection and all was good.

              Thx very much
              Gerhard

              Comment


              • #8
                That's one good thing about the newer reverb tanks, you can configure the RCA jacks to be grounded or not.

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