So three songs into the gig my Crate Blue Voodoo BV6212 makes a weird "humming" sound for a split second before going quiet. The power light is off and the thing appears completely dead. I quickly swap it out for the back up I always bring to gigs (a Peavey Bandit 65 from the 80s that would survive a nuclear blast, old Peavey amps and cockroaches are all that will be left).
I finally got around to troubleshooting it the other night. I pull the chassis and do a visual inspection which doesn't show anything obvious so I replace the fuse and turn it on with my current limiting light. Light is off on standby but as soon as I take it off standby the light glows BRIGHT. I pull the tubes one by one and get the same bright light when taken off of stand by (even with no tubes installed). So I unplug the connector from the power transformer B+ secondary and the current limiting light stays off when taken off of standby.
As this point I believe the power transformer is okay and the problem is something in the B+ power supply. Based on what I've read the most likely culprits are a shorted filter cap or shorted rectifier diode. Does this sound right? Besides pulling at least one leg of each diode/cap is there a simple way to test these in circuit? It seems me that to cause this issue one of the two diode connected directly to ground must have failed. Can I just measure between them to ground? I don't have a way to measure the value of the caps but I assume a shorted cap would be a "real" short and measure 0 ohms. I assume (hope) that l can measure these to ground also to detect a short. Am I wasting my time even testing these and should I just replace them all? Any other suggestions?
Schematic attached for reference.Crate Blue Voodoo BV6212 Schematic.pdfCrate Blue Voodoo BV6212 Schematic.pdf
Thanks!
I finally got around to troubleshooting it the other night. I pull the chassis and do a visual inspection which doesn't show anything obvious so I replace the fuse and turn it on with my current limiting light. Light is off on standby but as soon as I take it off standby the light glows BRIGHT. I pull the tubes one by one and get the same bright light when taken off of stand by (even with no tubes installed). So I unplug the connector from the power transformer B+ secondary and the current limiting light stays off when taken off of standby.
As this point I believe the power transformer is okay and the problem is something in the B+ power supply. Based on what I've read the most likely culprits are a shorted filter cap or shorted rectifier diode. Does this sound right? Besides pulling at least one leg of each diode/cap is there a simple way to test these in circuit? It seems me that to cause this issue one of the two diode connected directly to ground must have failed. Can I just measure between them to ground? I don't have a way to measure the value of the caps but I assume a shorted cap would be a "real" short and measure 0 ohms. I assume (hope) that l can measure these to ground also to detect a short. Am I wasting my time even testing these and should I just replace them all? Any other suggestions?
Schematic attached for reference.Crate Blue Voodoo BV6212 Schematic.pdfCrate Blue Voodoo BV6212 Schematic.pdf
Thanks!
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