Hi all,
Recently got a Roland JC-77 on which the reverb stopped working. One of the wires to the input transducer broke right at the bobbin so I'll have to buy a whole new pan .
However, before turning the unit on I plugged it into my light bulb limiter. When powered up through the limiter the bulb came on full brightness. Quickly shut it off, pulled the chassis, and set it up on the bench. Checked for shorted output transistors and all was well. Checked for shorted bridge rectifier and it was fine. Plugged into the limiter (no speaker load) and the bulb lit only dimly. Checked both 8 Ohm speakers and both are fine. Plugged in only one speaker and powered up the amp. Bulb lights up dimly and it passes signal. Connect a load to the second channel only and get the same result. With loads attached to both channels the bulb lights brightly and there's about 5VDC on the output of either one.
I guess my question is what element in the circuit could be giving out when the amp is fully loaded? And why would both channels work fine when they're isolated like that?
Schematic here:Roland jc-77-schematic.pdf
Recently got a Roland JC-77 on which the reverb stopped working. One of the wires to the input transducer broke right at the bobbin so I'll have to buy a whole new pan .
However, before turning the unit on I plugged it into my light bulb limiter. When powered up through the limiter the bulb came on full brightness. Quickly shut it off, pulled the chassis, and set it up on the bench. Checked for shorted output transistors and all was well. Checked for shorted bridge rectifier and it was fine. Plugged into the limiter (no speaker load) and the bulb lit only dimly. Checked both 8 Ohm speakers and both are fine. Plugged in only one speaker and powered up the amp. Bulb lights up dimly and it passes signal. Connect a load to the second channel only and get the same result. With loads attached to both channels the bulb lights brightly and there's about 5VDC on the output of either one.
I guess my question is what element in the circuit could be giving out when the amp is fully loaded? And why would both channels work fine when they're isolated like that?
Schematic here:Roland jc-77-schematic.pdf
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