Hello folks,
I'm a long-time lurker (read, "researcher") and first-time poster. Thanks for having me here! I hope I don't ruin my welcome with what I'm about to ask...
[EDIT] I'm posting this here in hopes that someone will find this useful someday. I have not found much of anything on these amps after months of crawling around the web. From what I can tell, Gibson only put out about 140 of these, so that's part of the reason why there is so little on them.
So I have this old Gibson GA-100 I'm working on for a friend. I was told he did not like the sound and wanted to change it to suit his taste, so I said OK. But, when I got the amp and plugged it in, it immediately turned on and produced no sound. (Lets for now forget the whole fact that I never heard the original "sound" he didnt like)
I checked the OEM speaker and it is fine. Next, I attached a new 3-prong cord for diagnosing issues. I come to find that one of the I/O wires to the power switch is melted through and shorting lugs. I pull the wire away and no more auto-powering issues!
Now, I turn the amp on and read input 125 VAC input, and the rectifier is pumping 480 VDC. I get a nasty low-speed motor-boating (?), but not per the typical, more like disctinct "whump-whump-whump" kinda thing happening. Also, in acts of desperation (and time saving), I have shotgunned all coupling caps, and about half of the resistors were way off. (maybe I should swap them all? Gosh, am I in deep here...)
I replace large electro filter caps, only to later find I'd install one backwards, which I swapped for a new one in the correct config (I know, shoot me... I'm NOT a tech, mmkay?). NOW, my caps are rated at 450VDC cuz the schematic I have tells me I should be getting 430V out of the GZ34 recto. I've been using a variac to bring the input down to 105VAC, but I'm still getting ~410VDC out of the rectifier (which is now a 5V4 I swapped in for testing, though the GZ34 acts the same).
Other notes:
- 6L6 tubes are OK
- 6BD6 drivers have been swapped for JAN-6AU6-WC, which I had on hand
- one of these is reading strangely high on plate voltage (160V) where the other is 110V (i checked the associated plate resistors and all check OK.
HERE comes my question... Can anybody help me determine the source of issues here? Here are the major symptoms:
- Abnormally high output voltage,
- 0A2 regulator drops ~150v from first node instead of 75V stated on schematic,
- Voltage drop on OPT primaries gives me ~2W of plate dissipation per 6L6 with a -33v bias voltage,
- Turning volume of amp up only increases HUMMMM, not actual amp volume,
- At low volume, there is what seem to be a high freq (15khz?) coming from the speaker; oscillations somewhere???
Everything I can think tells me it's the OPT, but I can't be sure. If you need more data, I'll post - just ask.
Thanks so much in advance for you help. Anything y'all can contribute would be much appreciated... I'm about to pull my hair out.
- Britt
P.S. - Here's the schematic:
I'm a long-time lurker (read, "researcher") and first-time poster. Thanks for having me here! I hope I don't ruin my welcome with what I'm about to ask...
[EDIT] I'm posting this here in hopes that someone will find this useful someday. I have not found much of anything on these amps after months of crawling around the web. From what I can tell, Gibson only put out about 140 of these, so that's part of the reason why there is so little on them.
So I have this old Gibson GA-100 I'm working on for a friend. I was told he did not like the sound and wanted to change it to suit his taste, so I said OK. But, when I got the amp and plugged it in, it immediately turned on and produced no sound. (Lets for now forget the whole fact that I never heard the original "sound" he didnt like)
I checked the OEM speaker and it is fine. Next, I attached a new 3-prong cord for diagnosing issues. I come to find that one of the I/O wires to the power switch is melted through and shorting lugs. I pull the wire away and no more auto-powering issues!
Now, I turn the amp on and read input 125 VAC input, and the rectifier is pumping 480 VDC. I get a nasty low-speed motor-boating (?), but not per the typical, more like disctinct "whump-whump-whump" kinda thing happening. Also, in acts of desperation (and time saving), I have shotgunned all coupling caps, and about half of the resistors were way off. (maybe I should swap them all? Gosh, am I in deep here...)
I replace large electro filter caps, only to later find I'd install one backwards, which I swapped for a new one in the correct config (I know, shoot me... I'm NOT a tech, mmkay?). NOW, my caps are rated at 450VDC cuz the schematic I have tells me I should be getting 430V out of the GZ34 recto. I've been using a variac to bring the input down to 105VAC, but I'm still getting ~410VDC out of the rectifier (which is now a 5V4 I swapped in for testing, though the GZ34 acts the same).
Other notes:
- 6L6 tubes are OK
- 6BD6 drivers have been swapped for JAN-6AU6-WC, which I had on hand
- one of these is reading strangely high on plate voltage (160V) where the other is 110V (i checked the associated plate resistors and all check OK.
HERE comes my question... Can anybody help me determine the source of issues here? Here are the major symptoms:
- Abnormally high output voltage,
- 0A2 regulator drops ~150v from first node instead of 75V stated on schematic,
- Voltage drop on OPT primaries gives me ~2W of plate dissipation per 6L6 with a -33v bias voltage,
- Turning volume of amp up only increases HUMMMM, not actual amp volume,
- At low volume, there is what seem to be a high freq (15khz?) coming from the speaker; oscillations somewhere???
Everything I can think tells me it's the OPT, but I can't be sure. If you need more data, I'll post - just ask.
Thanks so much in advance for you help. Anything y'all can contribute would be much appreciated... I'm about to pull my hair out.
- Britt
P.S. - Here's the schematic:
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