I got a Peavey Heritage VTX in for repair (no sound output). A little history, 2 years ago a tech for a small music store in San Diego examined and tore apart this amp and proclaimed that Q9 was shot and it should be replaced. The next day he died so 2 years later it appears on my bench, in pieces, to get fixed.
Schematic:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/k1h7wbifo2...x_sch.pdf?dl=0
I did a quick examination of Q9 and associated circuitry after slapping it back together good enough to power it on. Sure enough Q9 was not conducting, Q7 however looked to be doing it's job at about 74 VDC and I forget the milliamps on the emitter resistors but I remember it to be right about what is stated on the schematic. The emitter resistor for Q9 had no current going through it… looks like the dead tech was right.
I swapped in a pair of MJ15003's for a quick test and the swap changed nothing… mmmm??? Using my brand new whiz bang PIC based semiconductor identifier/checker which also does resistors and capacitors and ESR etc etc, oh my! That little dealie-bop told me that the original Peavey 6465 T0-3 NPN's were good and healthy, I believe it, how could a micro-controller based gizmo designed and programmed by someone unknown and soldered up by an old man with vision problems and shakey hands ever be wrong… still, I believe it.
anyway, let's get down to brass tacks…
I installed a matched known test quartet of 6L6GC's and brought the amp up with a variac while checking B+ and , speaker outputs hooked to a 4 ohm 400 watt dummy load, no signal input. Things looked cool and collected all the way up to 120VAC, all 4 heaters were emitting that soothing heater glow. Everything at that scale looks fine.
I checked the 0.522 and 1.07 VDC values in the base circuits of Q7 and Q9 and the Q7 circuit was pretty much what is stated on the schematic, (I wish I had my scratch sheet with me right now for the measured values) but let's say the 0.522 reference was 0.535 and the 1.07 reference was 1.09, that's pretty close right? Amazingly the troubled Q9 side was something like 0.486 and 1.08, a little low but still pretty close. I'm thinking that Q9 is not turning on, do I understand how a hybrid cathode controlled output stage works? Probably not, don't both sides need to match within a certain tolerance for the sides to be declared symmetrical, how much does that matter?
I decided to backup here and take a look at some of the things I should have looked at first, like I said, sometimes you never really know with me. The output transformer is GOOD, The power rectifiers are GOOD, so is the filter caps, the wires etc etc… The heaters got 6.3VAC, The B+ is right around 502VDC and looks relatively clean, The +15 volt regulated source puts out +15.001VDC, the regulated -15VDC is missing, Ah HA!!!!
I know that none of the fuses made it to me on their 2 year odyssey in the store room so I installed new proper fuses. R174 the 150 ohm 5 watter was open. I replace that and checked the current through the resistor and there was about 80ma, that should be fine, no wonder back when I injected the pre-stages the waveforms looked kind of funny. Those are all right as rain now, all the way up to the HV path through the output transformer primary, I got about 500 VDC in all the right places. I restored the -15VDC, so, power supply GOOD.
This had no effect on the primary complaint of no sound output as I figured it wouldn't , but it had to be taken care of, so back to the output stage.
I checked the sockets, pins, traces, solder connections, wire/connector integrity and just about anything else I can think of but this non conducting Q9 still persists… and Q9 and Q7 have been swapped and tested a few times, both with that PIC thingy and with my multimeter old style, and they both agree, R155 and R159 have been monitored closely and no change, within tolerance, whatever that really means.
Any suggestions?
Schematic:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/k1h7wbifo2...x_sch.pdf?dl=0
I did a quick examination of Q9 and associated circuitry after slapping it back together good enough to power it on. Sure enough Q9 was not conducting, Q7 however looked to be doing it's job at about 74 VDC and I forget the milliamps on the emitter resistors but I remember it to be right about what is stated on the schematic. The emitter resistor for Q9 had no current going through it… looks like the dead tech was right.
I swapped in a pair of MJ15003's for a quick test and the swap changed nothing… mmmm??? Using my brand new whiz bang PIC based semiconductor identifier/checker which also does resistors and capacitors and ESR etc etc, oh my! That little dealie-bop told me that the original Peavey 6465 T0-3 NPN's were good and healthy, I believe it, how could a micro-controller based gizmo designed and programmed by someone unknown and soldered up by an old man with vision problems and shakey hands ever be wrong… still, I believe it.
anyway, let's get down to brass tacks…
I installed a matched known test quartet of 6L6GC's and brought the amp up with a variac while checking B+ and , speaker outputs hooked to a 4 ohm 400 watt dummy load, no signal input. Things looked cool and collected all the way up to 120VAC, all 4 heaters were emitting that soothing heater glow. Everything at that scale looks fine.
I checked the 0.522 and 1.07 VDC values in the base circuits of Q7 and Q9 and the Q7 circuit was pretty much what is stated on the schematic, (I wish I had my scratch sheet with me right now for the measured values) but let's say the 0.522 reference was 0.535 and the 1.07 reference was 1.09, that's pretty close right? Amazingly the troubled Q9 side was something like 0.486 and 1.08, a little low but still pretty close. I'm thinking that Q9 is not turning on, do I understand how a hybrid cathode controlled output stage works? Probably not, don't both sides need to match within a certain tolerance for the sides to be declared symmetrical, how much does that matter?
I decided to backup here and take a look at some of the things I should have looked at first, like I said, sometimes you never really know with me. The output transformer is GOOD, The power rectifiers are GOOD, so is the filter caps, the wires etc etc… The heaters got 6.3VAC, The B+ is right around 502VDC and looks relatively clean, The +15 volt regulated source puts out +15.001VDC, the regulated -15VDC is missing, Ah HA!!!!
I know that none of the fuses made it to me on their 2 year odyssey in the store room so I installed new proper fuses. R174 the 150 ohm 5 watter was open. I replace that and checked the current through the resistor and there was about 80ma, that should be fine, no wonder back when I injected the pre-stages the waveforms looked kind of funny. Those are all right as rain now, all the way up to the HV path through the output transformer primary, I got about 500 VDC in all the right places. I restored the -15VDC, so, power supply GOOD.
This had no effect on the primary complaint of no sound output as I figured it wouldn't , but it had to be taken care of, so back to the output stage.
I checked the sockets, pins, traces, solder connections, wire/connector integrity and just about anything else I can think of but this non conducting Q9 still persists… and Q9 and Q7 have been swapped and tested a few times, both with that PIC thingy and with my multimeter old style, and they both agree, R155 and R159 have been monitored closely and no change, within tolerance, whatever that really means.
Any suggestions?
Comment