Hi everybody,
I have some hum issues with my Mesa Boogie Subway Blues. I know that these amps are famous for hum after they ran for a while but I'm pretty sure it's not that particular issue, especially since it's the newer version with the switch rather than different input jacks. And it's the non-Reverb version of the amp. Additionally I need to tell you that the hum is not unbearable. It is definitely more noise than my Crate V3112 produces and is unfortunately not well usable at bedroom levels. That's why I want to find the source for the hum and eliminate it.
First of all I need to mention that I have already contacted Chuck H who has been a great help with the issues and helped me understand what exactly is going on in this amp.
Okay, here's the story: I bought this amp used a few weeks back. All good except some hum. I did several tests, swapped tubes etc. --> The hum is mainly 100Hz but some 50Hz and higher harmonics seem to be included as well (I'm in Germany, so european power). Pulling tubes revealed that the hum seems to be related to the circuitry around V2. V2, as you can see from the schematic is located before and after the effects-loop. A former owner of the amp had disconnected the transistor-buffer for the effects-loop and ran a wire from the 0.01u capacitor after V2a directly to the effects-send. I tried to reconnect the buffer but found out that no signal was coming through. So I tried bypassing the whole effects-loop and the hum got a little better by connecting from the 0.01u to the 0.02u cap directly (via a c. 12 cm wire). As I would like to have an effects-loop I rebuild the transistor circuitry on strip grid with onboard send- and return-jacks and power supply. I have connected the unit with shielded wires whose shields are grounded at one end. Now the effect-loop works but the hum got a worse again. Moving the wires around inside the chassis while the amps running doesn't change the hum. The ground-wire for the effects-loop sub-pcb is connected to the negative leg of the bias-supply filter cap, as this was relatively close.
Here's all I know / what I have done so far:
The hum is not affected by any of the pots or the switch.
When switching off the Power-Supply while running the hum faded before I used shielded wire. Now it stops immediately so I suspect something related to the power-supply (+/- Grounding).
Installed new filter-caps (4x 33u/500V).
Checked grounding and made clear that the connection to the chassis is only made at the input-jack. The power-supply-Gnd is connected to the Preamp-Gnd from V1Gnd to the Gnd of the last filter-cap. I think that there shouldn't be any potential ground loops but I have to admit that I don't exactly know how the Gnd-traces run on the PCB.
The heater-wires for the power-tubes are not twisted but are attached to each other and run parallel to the power-tube sub-pcb with the HV wire also attached in parallel. However, moving them around in the Chassis didn't change the hum. The heater supply for the preamp tubes run as traces on the PCB, which I suppose is not great. The heater winding does have a center tap connected to Gnd.
I have additionally included some mods to the amp that have been suggested by Chuck H here on the music-electronics-forum. The mods included some resistor and cap-changes in the preamp which alter the preamp to be very Ab763-like. These mods did not alter the hum issue at all.
I have put together a google-drive folder with a video, pictures, schematic and noise figure (recorded with a smartphone app). There's also a schematic that shows the modifications suggested by Chuck H. I have adapted most of the preamp modifications, but did not change the bright-switch yet. And the input circuitry uses a 1M to Gnd followed by a 10k grid stopper with 150pF to ground (as per Merlins suggestions). But as I said these modifications did not change the hum.
Heres the link: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1gn...OcGpjzBpkxMpmT
I would be very grateful if anybody here can help me hunt down the hum. I don't have a scope here to check the hum/buzz-sines but any other ideas are very much appreciated.
I like this little amp and I already learned a lot by trying to figure out the hum issue.
Thank you very much.
I have some hum issues with my Mesa Boogie Subway Blues. I know that these amps are famous for hum after they ran for a while but I'm pretty sure it's not that particular issue, especially since it's the newer version with the switch rather than different input jacks. And it's the non-Reverb version of the amp. Additionally I need to tell you that the hum is not unbearable. It is definitely more noise than my Crate V3112 produces and is unfortunately not well usable at bedroom levels. That's why I want to find the source for the hum and eliminate it.
First of all I need to mention that I have already contacted Chuck H who has been a great help with the issues and helped me understand what exactly is going on in this amp.
Okay, here's the story: I bought this amp used a few weeks back. All good except some hum. I did several tests, swapped tubes etc. --> The hum is mainly 100Hz but some 50Hz and higher harmonics seem to be included as well (I'm in Germany, so european power). Pulling tubes revealed that the hum seems to be related to the circuitry around V2. V2, as you can see from the schematic is located before and after the effects-loop. A former owner of the amp had disconnected the transistor-buffer for the effects-loop and ran a wire from the 0.01u capacitor after V2a directly to the effects-send. I tried to reconnect the buffer but found out that no signal was coming through. So I tried bypassing the whole effects-loop and the hum got a little better by connecting from the 0.01u to the 0.02u cap directly (via a c. 12 cm wire). As I would like to have an effects-loop I rebuild the transistor circuitry on strip grid with onboard send- and return-jacks and power supply. I have connected the unit with shielded wires whose shields are grounded at one end. Now the effect-loop works but the hum got a worse again. Moving the wires around inside the chassis while the amps running doesn't change the hum. The ground-wire for the effects-loop sub-pcb is connected to the negative leg of the bias-supply filter cap, as this was relatively close.
Here's all I know / what I have done so far:
The hum is not affected by any of the pots or the switch.
When switching off the Power-Supply while running the hum faded before I used shielded wire. Now it stops immediately so I suspect something related to the power-supply (+/- Grounding).
Installed new filter-caps (4x 33u/500V).
Checked grounding and made clear that the connection to the chassis is only made at the input-jack. The power-supply-Gnd is connected to the Preamp-Gnd from V1Gnd to the Gnd of the last filter-cap. I think that there shouldn't be any potential ground loops but I have to admit that I don't exactly know how the Gnd-traces run on the PCB.
The heater-wires for the power-tubes are not twisted but are attached to each other and run parallel to the power-tube sub-pcb with the HV wire also attached in parallel. However, moving them around in the Chassis didn't change the hum. The heater supply for the preamp tubes run as traces on the PCB, which I suppose is not great. The heater winding does have a center tap connected to Gnd.
I have additionally included some mods to the amp that have been suggested by Chuck H here on the music-electronics-forum. The mods included some resistor and cap-changes in the preamp which alter the preamp to be very Ab763-like. These mods did not alter the hum issue at all.
I have put together a google-drive folder with a video, pictures, schematic and noise figure (recorded with a smartphone app). There's also a schematic that shows the modifications suggested by Chuck H. I have adapted most of the preamp modifications, but did not change the bright-switch yet. And the input circuitry uses a 1M to Gnd followed by a 10k grid stopper with 150pF to ground (as per Merlins suggestions). But as I said these modifications did not change the hum.
Heres the link: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1gn...OcGpjzBpkxMpmT
I would be very grateful if anybody here can help me hunt down the hum. I don't have a scope here to check the hum/buzz-sines but any other ideas are very much appreciated.
I like this little amp and I already learned a lot by trying to figure out the hum issue.
Thank you very much.
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