Hello everyone, this is my first post to the MEF. I'm not an electronics tech, but I'm slowly learning more about tube amps as I find it all very fascinating.
What brings me here today, is my Mesa Boogie Express 5:25, which has been giving me fits due to some intermittent red-plating of one of the two EL84 output tubes. The red-plating occurs (at least, when it occurs) after playing for some time.
Today I took the chassis out, and used my looper pedal to continually play through the amp while I monitored the bias voltage on pin 3. On both tubes the bias voltage started around -12v, but started dropping slowly. After about 15 minutes, one of the tube's bias stabilized at around -11.4v, but the other kept slowly and steadily dropping, until after 30 minutes or so, it was down to -5.8v and the plate was starting to glow orange - at that point I shut 'er down.
A couple of hours later, I reversed the positions of the tubes, repeated the test, and saw the same results with the same tube (not the same position, the red-plating occurred on the same tube).
Again, after a couple of hours, I reversed the positions of the tubes again, and repeated the test. Again, I saw the bias voltage start dropping again, however this time, it went down to about -9.5v, and then climbed back to -10.5v and seemed to stabilize (at least for another 10 minutes).
Anybody have any thoughts as to what would cause a tube to behave as such?
Thanks all!
What brings me here today, is my Mesa Boogie Express 5:25, which has been giving me fits due to some intermittent red-plating of one of the two EL84 output tubes. The red-plating occurs (at least, when it occurs) after playing for some time.
Today I took the chassis out, and used my looper pedal to continually play through the amp while I monitored the bias voltage on pin 3. On both tubes the bias voltage started around -12v, but started dropping slowly. After about 15 minutes, one of the tube's bias stabilized at around -11.4v, but the other kept slowly and steadily dropping, until after 30 minutes or so, it was down to -5.8v and the plate was starting to glow orange - at that point I shut 'er down.
A couple of hours later, I reversed the positions of the tubes, repeated the test, and saw the same results with the same tube (not the same position, the red-plating occurred on the same tube).
Again, after a couple of hours, I reversed the positions of the tubes again, and repeated the test. Again, I saw the bias voltage start dropping again, however this time, it went down to about -9.5v, and then climbed back to -10.5v and seemed to stabilize (at least for another 10 minutes).
Anybody have any thoughts as to what would cause a tube to behave as such?
Thanks all!
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