G'morning folks and hello. I'm new to this forum, so bear with me. I'm looking for advice/info on what's going on with my Peavey 6505+. I've already scoured the forums (and all of the internet for that matter) for anyone who has come across the same issue, and I've found absolutely nothing. I've found similar issues that had a simple solution, like dead tubes, sure. But nothing like what I'm encountering.
Just a quick disclaimer, I'm no stranger to fixing electronics, but this is the first time I've really dabbled in repairing a tube amp. I'm well aware of the high voltages and dangers present, blah blah blah. Don't worry; I'm aware of draining capacitors, etc.. not my first rodeo.) Also, I'm not interested in hearing any replies suggesting that I take the amp to a tech... I am a tech, so to speak... Just not for tube amps necessarily, but I'm more than capable of fixing it with a bit of further direction. I wouldn't be asking for help if I were looking to just send it to a shop.
So let's go!
I received this 6505+ on a trade, and the previous owner said the only issue was a blown output fuse, so I thought cool, not a big deal. Received the amp, and sure enough, the output fuse was indeed blown. I swapped in a new one and powered on the amp. Within 10 seconds, still on standby, a single power tube arced white light, big pop from the speaker cabinet, and the few blew again. Hmm... Bad power tube? Tested all the tubes, all checked out fine. Put in a new fuse again, and powered it up.. Within 10 seconds again, single random tube arced, loud pop, blown fuse. Tried again with an entirely new set of known good tubes; exact same condition.
So here's the scenario in point form:
-With power tubes in, single tube (seemingly random) arcs within 10 seconds, and the output fuse blows. This is while still in standby. I never get to the point of being able to switch it to play condition. See photo:
-After fuse blows, all tubes heaters stay lit and look normal; amp will not come off standby (since fuse is blown). See photo:
-If I replace the fuse and remove all power tubes and power it up, standby can be switched off and on absolutely normally. Note picture:
-Tried running with 2 tubes, same issue... random tube arcs, blows fuse.
-Built-in bias voltage test points read 55 volts (which is where it should be for these amps).
Here's what I've deduced so far, with no luck:
Because the amp powers on, doesn't blow fuses, and seems just fine with no power tubes in, I figured the issue would have to be at the power board. So I removed the power board and tested all the resistors, caps and diodes on it. I found one dead screen grid resistor on the board:
I replaced this resistor thinking it was the cause of the short/arc... Nope. Still exact same condition. Recall, the arc still happens in a random tube, not necessarily the tube that this resistor was connected to. Same random arc before/after resistor swap.
So the power board all seems fine. I tested the rectifier diodes on the main board (visible near the fuses in the photo above), and those check out ok. There are no visible burned/scorched spots or components anywhere on the board. Note that I'm only talking about the top/visible side of the main board. I tested the output transformer, and the windings all seem fine. Found no shorts on any tap.
And again, this happens after around 10 seconds of power on. It's not an instant short/blow (the fuse is a fast-blow, btw).
I haven't yet taken out the big main board, but before I do, I'm hoping somebody here might have some insight on what step(s) to take next. Ideally, I'd love if one of you experts can chime in and be like "oh! that's a dead ______" and have it be a simple fix, but I'm not holding my breath.
Please help! Thanks!
Just a quick disclaimer, I'm no stranger to fixing electronics, but this is the first time I've really dabbled in repairing a tube amp. I'm well aware of the high voltages and dangers present, blah blah blah. Don't worry; I'm aware of draining capacitors, etc.. not my first rodeo.) Also, I'm not interested in hearing any replies suggesting that I take the amp to a tech... I am a tech, so to speak... Just not for tube amps necessarily, but I'm more than capable of fixing it with a bit of further direction. I wouldn't be asking for help if I were looking to just send it to a shop.
So let's go!
I received this 6505+ on a trade, and the previous owner said the only issue was a blown output fuse, so I thought cool, not a big deal. Received the amp, and sure enough, the output fuse was indeed blown. I swapped in a new one and powered on the amp. Within 10 seconds, still on standby, a single power tube arced white light, big pop from the speaker cabinet, and the few blew again. Hmm... Bad power tube? Tested all the tubes, all checked out fine. Put in a new fuse again, and powered it up.. Within 10 seconds again, single random tube arced, loud pop, blown fuse. Tried again with an entirely new set of known good tubes; exact same condition.
So here's the scenario in point form:
-With power tubes in, single tube (seemingly random) arcs within 10 seconds, and the output fuse blows. This is while still in standby. I never get to the point of being able to switch it to play condition. See photo:
-After fuse blows, all tubes heaters stay lit and look normal; amp will not come off standby (since fuse is blown). See photo:
-If I replace the fuse and remove all power tubes and power it up, standby can be switched off and on absolutely normally. Note picture:
-Tried running with 2 tubes, same issue... random tube arcs, blows fuse.
-Built-in bias voltage test points read 55 volts (which is where it should be for these amps).
Here's what I've deduced so far, with no luck:
Because the amp powers on, doesn't blow fuses, and seems just fine with no power tubes in, I figured the issue would have to be at the power board. So I removed the power board and tested all the resistors, caps and diodes on it. I found one dead screen grid resistor on the board:
I replaced this resistor thinking it was the cause of the short/arc... Nope. Still exact same condition. Recall, the arc still happens in a random tube, not necessarily the tube that this resistor was connected to. Same random arc before/after resistor swap.
So the power board all seems fine. I tested the rectifier diodes on the main board (visible near the fuses in the photo above), and those check out ok. There are no visible burned/scorched spots or components anywhere on the board. Note that I'm only talking about the top/visible side of the main board. I tested the output transformer, and the windings all seem fine. Found no shorts on any tap.
And again, this happens after around 10 seconds of power on. It's not an instant short/blow (the fuse is a fast-blow, btw).
I haven't yet taken out the big main board, but before I do, I'm hoping somebody here might have some insight on what step(s) to take next. Ideally, I'd love if one of you experts can chime in and be like "oh! that's a dead ______" and have it be a simple fix, but I'm not holding my breath.
Please help! Thanks!
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