Got a Peavey 6505 Plus 120 watt head that came in with bad sounds after changing all six pre and 4 output tubes. Customer wants me to check bias, but then tells me these Peavey amps are "plug and play" so they don't need to have the bias checked. Well, the clean channel sounds good, but the dirt channel sounds raspy, so I don't think it is the power section. But, I wonder about the bias points on the back panel (sorry have not found the schematic as of yet). The measurement is expressed in volts, and I read +54.6 volts and find the pot all the way to the extreme. I measure one tube at 25.5mA in this position. With the pot all the way to the opposite extreme I read 65v, and 9.5mA. Seems like kind of a useless measurement.
Then I read in the Peavey forums that Peavey put those test points there with a pot with a narrow sweep so guys couldn't damage their amps? And that they intend for these amps to run that cold because they are for metalheads. I confess, I did not know metal amps were intended to run at 20mA or so. That would explain the "plug and play" comment, since it is set so cold with the sweep range that you can't really do much with it anyway. I set it a bit towards the center.
Another question, I saw a video of a serving of this amp, and the guy found that he had 6.3vac at the power supply, but only 5.7vac on the filaments, so he ran a jumpered pair straight to the tubes to get full filament voltage. I checked the one I have, and same thing, 5.8vac. Now I wonder, should I do the same "repair", or is this a thing that Peavey did on purpose for some reason?
Then I read in the Peavey forums that Peavey put those test points there with a pot with a narrow sweep so guys couldn't damage their amps? And that they intend for these amps to run that cold because they are for metalheads. I confess, I did not know metal amps were intended to run at 20mA or so. That would explain the "plug and play" comment, since it is set so cold with the sweep range that you can't really do much with it anyway. I set it a bit towards the center.
Another question, I saw a video of a serving of this amp, and the guy found that he had 6.3vac at the power supply, but only 5.7vac on the filaments, so he ran a jumpered pair straight to the tubes to get full filament voltage. I checked the one I have, and same thing, 5.8vac. Now I wonder, should I do the same "repair", or is this a thing that Peavey did on purpose for some reason?
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