R60 is fine. If you really must measure it, lift one end from the circuit board, so it is out of the circuot. Now it will read 10k. If R60 was bad, none of the switching functions would work.
In normal operation, Q1 is only on for a brief pulse right when channels change. It is not a steady on/off thing.
Fix one problem at a time, the reverb is not the reason you have low output, so forget it. Chances are when you fix the main problem, the reverb will fix itself.
My schematic shows TP33 as greater than -0.6v for ON and less than -0.6v for OFF. So -0.6v is where it changes. 5v is greater than -0.6, so is 15v, and -12 is less than, etc. The actual voltage is not specified, at least not on my print.
The idea of pulling Q1 is that it instantly shows whether the whole mute thing is involved or not. If pulling it cures the amp, we are right. if it has no effect, we can ignore all the switching/muting stuff.
You are right though, the reverb should default on, so swap out U4 and find out. This isn't a time to be cerebral, we just swap out U4, lift Q1, and chances are all the questions are answered.
In normal operation, Q1 is only on for a brief pulse right when channels change. It is not a steady on/off thing.
Fix one problem at a time, the reverb is not the reason you have low output, so forget it. Chances are when you fix the main problem, the reverb will fix itself.
My schematic shows TP33 as greater than -0.6v for ON and less than -0.6v for OFF. So -0.6v is where it changes. 5v is greater than -0.6, so is 15v, and -12 is less than, etc. The actual voltage is not specified, at least not on my print.
The idea of pulling Q1 is that it instantly shows whether the whole mute thing is involved or not. If pulling it cures the amp, we are right. if it has no effect, we can ignore all the switching/muting stuff.
You are right though, the reverb should default on, so swap out U4 and find out. This isn't a time to be cerebral, we just swap out U4, lift Q1, and chances are all the questions are answered.
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