I've replaced the mains inlet pcb and power transformer. Previous owner had a 25a main fuse in it and fried them both. They were relatively simple to repair and now the amp at least turns on, where before it was blowing fuses immediately on power up.
First thing I did was attempt to bias from the pins located on the back. Service bulletin calls for 80 mV and I'm maxing the bias pots out at 15 mV with amp connected to a load and heat up time of approximately 20-25 minutes.
Also, I plugged a guitar in and my ultra gain is humming at only 20% gain. The amp doesn't sound horrible through classic gain but its definitely missing something. Where as my low end is almost non exsistant in ultra gain.
So far I've been told that its likely that my board is conductive between the pins of my output tubes. But by my understanding this common problem results in high bias readings and mine aren't even close. In fact, I'm weary of playing my amp at all for fear of my amp playing too cold. But thats just a hunch, no real knowledge to back that up.
First thing I did was attempt to bias from the pins located on the back. Service bulletin calls for 80 mV and I'm maxing the bias pots out at 15 mV with amp connected to a load and heat up time of approximately 20-25 minutes.
Also, I plugged a guitar in and my ultra gain is humming at only 20% gain. The amp doesn't sound horrible through classic gain but its definitely missing something. Where as my low end is almost non exsistant in ultra gain.
So far I've been told that its likely that my board is conductive between the pins of my output tubes. But by my understanding this common problem results in high bias readings and mine aren't even close. In fact, I'm weary of playing my amp at all for fear of my amp playing too cold. But thats just a hunch, no real knowledge to back that up.
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