Marshall JCM 800 2203 100 W lead re-issue head. Brought to me because tubes light up but no sound. 1A Slow Blow HT fuse was blown. HT fuse blows with all tubes removed and when standby switch is flipped to play mode. Fuse does not blow with lightbulb limiter connected to mains. When standby switch is flipped to play mode with lightbulb limiter connected, bulb flashes quickly and then dims quickly - fuse does not blow. When amp is brought up to full voltage slowly on variac in play mode with no light bulb limiter - fuse does not blow. With ammeter setting on Fluke DVM connected in place of fuse, peak reading never exceeds 1A when standby is flipped to play mode albeit the meter is probably too slow to read a peak happening that fast. So there are no apparent shorts as the amp runs with or without tubes when brought up slowly but blows fuse whenever it is switched to play mode, with or without tubes. What gives? Could a Standby switch somehow cause this?
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HT Fuse Mystery - Standby Switch Problem?
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Are the heaters at 6.3V (ie. is the mains voltage appropriate) ?
Can you link to a schematic?
What is the idle current through the fuse, and can you tell what that increases to when the amp is cranked?
Are you using a quality branded fuse whose purchase history is known ?
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostI too question the fuses, are they really slow blow (timed) fuses in your box?
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Originally posted by jasonguitar View PostDoesn’t exceed 200ma when standby is flipped to play mode. Gone through all my fuses now. I’ll try a bus type 1A clipped in.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Link to accurate schematic? Point being that the dreaded standby can be implemented various ways, and when things go wacky, such detail may be significant.My band:- http://www.youtube.com/user/RedwingBand
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Originally posted by pdf64 View PostLink to accurate schematic? Point being that the dreaded standby can be implemented various ways, and when things go wacky, such detail may be significant.
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Hmmm, I'd suggest the fuse type needs to be confirmed to be UL284 compliant time delay from a respectable manufacturer.
The difference between your fuses blowing when standby was in or out would indicate a higher initial peak surge as the transformer is already on line. If the transformer was also being energised at the same time as the secondary caps, then that can limit the peak surge current available to the caps in the first half-cycles of mains AC connection, due to transformer primary winding in-rush current, and the extra peak loading on the heater winding from cold heaters.
I'm guessing you only have one applicable and available primary voltage tapping on the transformer, ie. 110V. If you did have a significantly higher mains AC voltage, then the capacitor inrush current (energy) would be significantly higher than 'rated', as the energy needed to charger up the caps is proportional to voltage squared, and so that may also influence your fuse hassles.
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