I have two Peavey Triple X 2x12 combos in right now, both with the same fault. At first glance it appeared that electrolyte was leaking from one of the main filter caps.
In particular, each amp has serious corrosion to the two low-voltage dropper resistors nearby. In one amp the legs are eaten right through and the ceramic bodies appear to be oozing a foamy liquid. The other amp (pictured) has split the ceramic resistor body and the other resistor is open-circuit. Interestingly, the top of the split resistor is wet with a gel. Given that this is the top-side of the component when installed in the amp it's difficult to see how this would occur.
Anyhow, this get more perplexing, as on close inspection the removed caps show no signs of leakage and are just damp around the outer edge where capilliary action has drawn the liquid around them. The seals and teminals are dry.
Both amps are brand new and were bought directly from Peavey as not working when they closed UK operations.
The amps are suffering from a variety of faults - shorted rectifier diodes, burnt and corroded tracks, burnt resistors, open resistors, no continuty between through-hole vias, incorrect mains voltage selector position, shorted transistors, shorted op-amps, and corroded socket pins.
The main puzzle is the corrosive gel; it looks like capacitor ooze, but I'm not entirely convinced. Has anyone else seen this? Apologies for the focussing, too late by the time I came to post this....
In particular, each amp has serious corrosion to the two low-voltage dropper resistors nearby. In one amp the legs are eaten right through and the ceramic bodies appear to be oozing a foamy liquid. The other amp (pictured) has split the ceramic resistor body and the other resistor is open-circuit. Interestingly, the top of the split resistor is wet with a gel. Given that this is the top-side of the component when installed in the amp it's difficult to see how this would occur.
Anyhow, this get more perplexing, as on close inspection the removed caps show no signs of leakage and are just damp around the outer edge where capilliary action has drawn the liquid around them. The seals and teminals are dry.
Both amps are brand new and were bought directly from Peavey as not working when they closed UK operations.
The amps are suffering from a variety of faults - shorted rectifier diodes, burnt and corroded tracks, burnt resistors, open resistors, no continuty between through-hole vias, incorrect mains voltage selector position, shorted transistors, shorted op-amps, and corroded socket pins.
The main puzzle is the corrosive gel; it looks like capacitor ooze, but I'm not entirely convinced. Has anyone else seen this? Apologies for the focussing, too late by the time I came to post this....
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