Hello,
I have a Gibson Skylark GA-5 here. Fortunately this schematic lines up perfectly with the specimen I have in front of me (apparently some of these vintage Gibson amps and schematics are all over the map specifications-wise). The amp was humming like crazy and I replaced the filter caps, much quieter now. Anyway, I went to check the coupling caps for leakage. The .0047uF cap between V1A plate and the section which I am guessing is the tone stack (followed by the volume control and V1B grid) is reading 58VDC on the V1B grid side. I measured its capacitance out of circuit and it seems fine. I also tried swapping in a brand new cap and got the exact same thing. Is that amount of DC voltage to be expected there? The other coupling caps show close to zero volts of DC leakage, the highest being .025 VDC at the grid of V4.
- B.L.
I have a Gibson Skylark GA-5 here. Fortunately this schematic lines up perfectly with the specimen I have in front of me (apparently some of these vintage Gibson amps and schematics are all over the map specifications-wise). The amp was humming like crazy and I replaced the filter caps, much quieter now. Anyway, I went to check the coupling caps for leakage. The .0047uF cap between V1A plate and the section which I am guessing is the tone stack (followed by the volume control and V1B grid) is reading 58VDC on the V1B grid side. I measured its capacitance out of circuit and it seems fine. I also tried swapping in a brand new cap and got the exact same thing. Is that amount of DC voltage to be expected there? The other coupling caps show close to zero volts of DC leakage, the highest being .025 VDC at the grid of V4.
- B.L.
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