(location is Southern California, normal US line voltage)
I have been searching various sites looking for troubleshooting expertise on noise my (relatively new) Crate CA6110D (Gunnison) Amp is producing. I did find several informative posts, and so I am providing where I have gotten in troubleshooting as well as a sound clip of this noise. I know that it is not "normal" as it did not make this noise when new, and it is only about 3 years old. First, What I believe I have narrowed it to / information on the situation:
-noise seems related to main power supply (i.e. 60Hz or 120 Hz -listen to sound file attached. I turn off the power mid sound bite so you can hear the power up and noise when I turn it back on)
-Amplifier is "working normally" in all functions outside of this hum. i.e. the inputs work with mic or guitar, and if you are relatively loud, you can't hear the hum because it does not increase in volume with the rest of the program. It is at low levels or between playing/singing that the hum is noticeable.
-I do not believe it is in the preamp section(s), due to the following troubleshooting: 1) noise is present and same intensity regardless of whether anything is plugged in to any input or not. 2) noise is present and same intensity regardless of gain levels of any channels or main volume setting. 3) with a guitar plugged in, I took effects send output into a separate amp and the hum is not present (just normal guitar noise). I also did the same with the overall line output from the back, and again, noise hiss levels are normal, but this oscillating hum not present - this seems to point to the Power amp section, since a clean signal can be achieved past the preamp and all the internal effects sections.
-Finally, and this is a weird one, I "think" I made the noise go away briefly. I opened the case and just pushed on/reseated connectors as a first troubleshooting effort since I have done that with a different SS amp and it actually was the issue. Then when I turned the power on, the hum was gone but then I bumped the amp, pulling the plug out-when I plugged it back in and turned it on, the hum was present again and continues to be present. This made me think that perhaps one component was simply "loose". I disassembled the amp to the point of taking the power amp out completely and examined both sides of the board-but I see no indications of any loose or broken solders or traces and no inactions of anything burned or otherwise damaged.
QUESTIONS:
1) Any guess as to the cause of the noise?
2) If it is a diagnosis of a filter capacitor, what capacitor(s) are likely the culprit(s)? (schematic attached).
3) If it is a filter capacitor(s) is there any way to test in place, or do I just need to remove and replace with new ones and then re-test? (all caps are pretty well glued around with silicone of some kind, but I can cut that away if needed)
4) If it is the power transformer, wouldn't that noise be present in the pre-amp output or line output as well as the main speaker output?
Any help or expertise is welcome. No need for cautions about voltages, please, I understand that part of it and won't electrocute myself. I do not have extensive equipment, just a pretty good multimeter, soldering capability, and other basic tools-but no oscilloscope.
V/R,
Bill
I have been searching various sites looking for troubleshooting expertise on noise my (relatively new) Crate CA6110D (Gunnison) Amp is producing. I did find several informative posts, and so I am providing where I have gotten in troubleshooting as well as a sound clip of this noise. I know that it is not "normal" as it did not make this noise when new, and it is only about 3 years old. First, What I believe I have narrowed it to / information on the situation:
-noise seems related to main power supply (i.e. 60Hz or 120 Hz -listen to sound file attached. I turn off the power mid sound bite so you can hear the power up and noise when I turn it back on)
-Amplifier is "working normally" in all functions outside of this hum. i.e. the inputs work with mic or guitar, and if you are relatively loud, you can't hear the hum because it does not increase in volume with the rest of the program. It is at low levels or between playing/singing that the hum is noticeable.
-I do not believe it is in the preamp section(s), due to the following troubleshooting: 1) noise is present and same intensity regardless of whether anything is plugged in to any input or not. 2) noise is present and same intensity regardless of gain levels of any channels or main volume setting. 3) with a guitar plugged in, I took effects send output into a separate amp and the hum is not present (just normal guitar noise). I also did the same with the overall line output from the back, and again, noise hiss levels are normal, but this oscillating hum not present - this seems to point to the Power amp section, since a clean signal can be achieved past the preamp and all the internal effects sections.
-Finally, and this is a weird one, I "think" I made the noise go away briefly. I opened the case and just pushed on/reseated connectors as a first troubleshooting effort since I have done that with a different SS amp and it actually was the issue. Then when I turned the power on, the hum was gone but then I bumped the amp, pulling the plug out-when I plugged it back in and turned it on, the hum was present again and continues to be present. This made me think that perhaps one component was simply "loose". I disassembled the amp to the point of taking the power amp out completely and examined both sides of the board-but I see no indications of any loose or broken solders or traces and no inactions of anything burned or otherwise damaged.
QUESTIONS:
1) Any guess as to the cause of the noise?
2) If it is a diagnosis of a filter capacitor, what capacitor(s) are likely the culprit(s)? (schematic attached).
3) If it is a filter capacitor(s) is there any way to test in place, or do I just need to remove and replace with new ones and then re-test? (all caps are pretty well glued around with silicone of some kind, but I can cut that away if needed)
4) If it is the power transformer, wouldn't that noise be present in the pre-amp output or line output as well as the main speaker output?
Any help or expertise is welcome. No need for cautions about voltages, please, I understand that part of it and won't electrocute myself. I do not have extensive equipment, just a pretty good multimeter, soldering capability, and other basic tools-but no oscilloscope.
V/R,
Bill
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