Hey guys! This is my first post. It's nice to be with you but I wish it was under better circumstances.
A couple days ago my B-52 AT100 crapped out. I'm pissed because I wanted to sell it to help downsize to a Vox AC15. Oh well.
One day it was working fine. The next day it wasn't. I did nothing that should have caused this - the amp sat in one spot, I did not power it up without a load connected, and I have not used or abused it in any way which would lead me to think I caused it to fail. The amp runs hot but I usually run it for less than a half hour at a time. It sees light use, and I don't gig it. I understand these B-52s are absolutely riddled with problems - destined to fail, as it were. If it wasn't the best-sounding amp I've ever owned (and I own a 1980 Fender 140, which sounds great), I'd have thrown it in the trash already. Or slowly dragged it to the trash. What a backbreaker.
I'm hoping you can help me come up with a solution.
Here is the problem:
There is absolutely no sound output from either speaker jack at 8 ohms. This happened without warning. I was not playing when the problem occurred, I simply went to play through it and when I took it out of standby there was dead silence. I have not tried it at any other impedance because I only own 8 ohm cabinets.
The amplifier powers on. The power indicator and the LED indicators on the front of the amp light up and switch, as do the LED indicators on the footswitch. Therefore, the cause of the problem is not a blown fuse. Whatever the cause is, it is not obvious.
Here are the steps I took to troubleshoot it:
- I tried jumping the FX loop with a 1/4" cable as recommended by a forum user in a 2007 thread. No luck.
- I tried operating the amplifier with the rectifier knob in all three positions (Tube A, Tube AB, Solid State) to no avail. Still no output. No audible pops when the rec knob is switched like some users were reporting.
My next thought was that perhaps I had a blown tube.
- I examined all tubes (4x 12AX7 preamp, 1x 12AX7 reverb, 1x 12AX7 phase inverter, 1x 12AX7 reverb, 1x 12AX7 FX loop, 4x 6L6 power, 1x 5AR4 rectifier) and saw that all the tubes lit up (dimly). Two of the 12AX7 tubes - the two furthest away from the power jack - are shielded (completely, except for the veeery tip poking out) with metal covers, and I could not see whether or not they were glowing.
- I tested each tube with a pencil tap and found none to be microphonic. All of the 12AX7 tubes are Electro-Harmonix - not sure if that's factory stock but I'm guessing it's been fully retubed.
- I examined the tubes again and this time I noticed that the filament in the 5AR4 was NOT actually lighting up, and the tube was not heating. Totally cool to the touch when other tubes were hot. I looked at a spare 5AR4 I have and saw what the filament should look like, and based on this I determined that the rec tube was blown.
- I then replaced the rectifier tube with a Groove Tubes 5AR4. Upon power-up the rec tube quickly heated up nice and bright and the other tubes seemed to be glowing more than before too. Unfortunately, there's still no output. Again, I tried jumping the FX loop and again, I tried the amp in all three rec modes. Still no output.
- I called B-52 customer support and explained my situation. The rep told me that he could only do so much over the phone, and, based on the problem I described, my best bet would be to take it to a tech who could "figure it out within five minutes". All I see is dollar signs.
I understand that the tube glowing does not always indicate that the tube is functional, so my next step was going to be taking my single spare 12AX7 tube and slotting it in for each 12AX7 to find out if any of them are causing a problem.
What steps would y'all take from here? I'm too broke to have an amp tech fix it (do they usually charge you just to take a quick peek and see if there's an obvious problem?), and I'm too broke to do a full re-tube. Either of those options would cost me more than the amp did. I understand how to drain filter caps, and the basic safety principles regarding high-voltage circuitry work (don't put your body in the signal path, hand in pocket, drain caps, have a multimeter on the thing at all times, be f**king careful), so I'm seriously considering popping this puppy open and looking for obvious problems, like busted connections, burns, or browning. I'm a little scared to do that, which tells me I probably shouldn't be doing it, but you know what? I need to sell this damn thing. Please help.
A couple days ago my B-52 AT100 crapped out. I'm pissed because I wanted to sell it to help downsize to a Vox AC15. Oh well.
One day it was working fine. The next day it wasn't. I did nothing that should have caused this - the amp sat in one spot, I did not power it up without a load connected, and I have not used or abused it in any way which would lead me to think I caused it to fail. The amp runs hot but I usually run it for less than a half hour at a time. It sees light use, and I don't gig it. I understand these B-52s are absolutely riddled with problems - destined to fail, as it were. If it wasn't the best-sounding amp I've ever owned (and I own a 1980 Fender 140, which sounds great), I'd have thrown it in the trash already. Or slowly dragged it to the trash. What a backbreaker.
I'm hoping you can help me come up with a solution.
Here is the problem:
There is absolutely no sound output from either speaker jack at 8 ohms. This happened without warning. I was not playing when the problem occurred, I simply went to play through it and when I took it out of standby there was dead silence. I have not tried it at any other impedance because I only own 8 ohm cabinets.
The amplifier powers on. The power indicator and the LED indicators on the front of the amp light up and switch, as do the LED indicators on the footswitch. Therefore, the cause of the problem is not a blown fuse. Whatever the cause is, it is not obvious.
Here are the steps I took to troubleshoot it:
- I tried jumping the FX loop with a 1/4" cable as recommended by a forum user in a 2007 thread. No luck.
- I tried operating the amplifier with the rectifier knob in all three positions (Tube A, Tube AB, Solid State) to no avail. Still no output. No audible pops when the rec knob is switched like some users were reporting.
My next thought was that perhaps I had a blown tube.
- I examined all tubes (4x 12AX7 preamp, 1x 12AX7 reverb, 1x 12AX7 phase inverter, 1x 12AX7 reverb, 1x 12AX7 FX loop, 4x 6L6 power, 1x 5AR4 rectifier) and saw that all the tubes lit up (dimly). Two of the 12AX7 tubes - the two furthest away from the power jack - are shielded (completely, except for the veeery tip poking out) with metal covers, and I could not see whether or not they were glowing.
- I tested each tube with a pencil tap and found none to be microphonic. All of the 12AX7 tubes are Electro-Harmonix - not sure if that's factory stock but I'm guessing it's been fully retubed.
- I examined the tubes again and this time I noticed that the filament in the 5AR4 was NOT actually lighting up, and the tube was not heating. Totally cool to the touch when other tubes were hot. I looked at a spare 5AR4 I have and saw what the filament should look like, and based on this I determined that the rec tube was blown.
- I then replaced the rectifier tube with a Groove Tubes 5AR4. Upon power-up the rec tube quickly heated up nice and bright and the other tubes seemed to be glowing more than before too. Unfortunately, there's still no output. Again, I tried jumping the FX loop and again, I tried the amp in all three rec modes. Still no output.
- I called B-52 customer support and explained my situation. The rep told me that he could only do so much over the phone, and, based on the problem I described, my best bet would be to take it to a tech who could "figure it out within five minutes". All I see is dollar signs.
I understand that the tube glowing does not always indicate that the tube is functional, so my next step was going to be taking my single spare 12AX7 tube and slotting it in for each 12AX7 to find out if any of them are causing a problem.
What steps would y'all take from here? I'm too broke to have an amp tech fix it (do they usually charge you just to take a quick peek and see if there's an obvious problem?), and I'm too broke to do a full re-tube. Either of those options would cost me more than the amp did. I understand how to drain filter caps, and the basic safety principles regarding high-voltage circuitry work (don't put your body in the signal path, hand in pocket, drain caps, have a multimeter on the thing at all times, be f**king careful), so I'm seriously considering popping this puppy open and looking for obvious problems, like busted connections, burns, or browning. I'm a little scared to do that, which tells me I probably shouldn't be doing it, but you know what? I need to sell this damn thing. Please help.
Comment