Originally posted by nevetslab
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1967 Ampeg Reverberocket 2 Reverb Not Working
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Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Originally posted by g1 View PostGrids can sometimes not like being measured to ground. Measure with your black probe on the cathode, red to grid. Then subtract that number from what you measured from cathode to ground.
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Originally posted by Steelwitch View PostI measured voltage from grid to cathode (P7 to P6) and it was reading -173vDC.. I might check with another meter just to verify. I'm not sure if it's within range of what nevetslab stated should be correct. My head is really starting to spin with this one.- Own Opinions Only -
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Originally posted by nevetslab View PostAny luck with getting signal on the scope thru the Reverb Drive stage and from the Reverb Return gain stage?
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Originally posted by nevetslab View Post
As for where to connect your scope probe to look at the signal going to and coming from the reverb tank (once you get the circuit voltages corrected for Section B, you can look at input to grid of 6U10 pin 11, junction of a 2.2M, 220k & 0.1uF plate coupling stage preceding this stage, then look at the connection following the 0.47uF cap off the plate of 6U10 pin 2 (6U10-A). This would be the reverb drive signal. The Return signal can be found at the wiper of the Reverb pot (when the pot is at max CW), this being from the plate of 6U10 pin 5 via 0.005uF. The Reverb signal mixes with the dry signal at the grid of V3 12AX7-pin 7.
A quick check on the Reverb tank for DC resistance on the tank input and tank output will usually confirm the tank being ok, and not indicating an open tank xfmr coil.
Ok, so input to grid of 6U10 on pin 11 is good, coupling stage off pin 11 looks good, however there is no signal across the .47 cap off of pin 2, and the signal I'm getting directly off of pin 2 looks very unstable and unclear. the return signal is perfect.
I have switched from the internal reverb tank to a known working one. the stock reverb tank has about 200ohms on the input and nothing from tip to sleeve on the output, although I don't totally trust that it's an open transformer.. I'm starting to have buyers remorse for this Klein mm500, its not always accurate. I really need to grab myself a fluke.. anyway, it seems like this wima .47uf cap is suspect? thoughts? I gave it a quick look in circuit and it tests perfectly, but I should disconnect a leg just to double check.
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Any tank should read less than 1K DC resistance at the tank output jack. If it reads open it is bad, or a wire to the jack is broken.
You said in the first post you knew ("for a fact" ) the tank was ok, so we did not second guess you. How did you determine that? Did something change?
edit: sounds like you may just be having a meter problem, if so, ignore this post.Last edited by g1; 11-15-2018, 09:37 PM.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Originally posted by Steelwitch View PostOk, so input to grid of 6U10 on pin 11 is good, coupling stage off pin 11 looks good, however there is no signal across the .47 cap off of pin 2, and the signal I'm getting directly off of pin 2 looks very unstable and unclear. the return signal is perfect.
I have switched from the internal reverb tank to a known working one. the stock reverb tank has about 200ohms on the input and nothing from tip to sleeve on the output, although I don't totally trust that it's an open transformer.. I'm starting to have buyers remorse for this Klein mm500, its not always accurate. I really need to grab myself a fluke.. anyway, it seems like this wima .47uf cap is suspect? thoughts? I gave it a quick look in circuit and it tests perfectly, but I should disconnect a leg just to double check.
The Return Signal is perfect. Meaning you can inject oscillator signal into the return circuit and all is well, or you get the reverb tank signal thru it just fine (off 6U10 Pin 5, or further down stream off the 12AX7 Pin 6, which is mixing dry with wet signal (from the tank circuit).
I haven't had one of these amps on my bench in years. Just have the Jet's, Super Jets, Super Rockets in our inventory.Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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Is this one of those amps with a hardwired footswitch? If there is a stuck switch or cable fault, it would ground the signal on the tank side of that .47 cap.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Okay y’all, I’ve learned a valuable lesson today— I reflowed the solder on the tip and ground connections on the Reverb tank and now the reverb works! There is another present issue where the reverb trails off into feedback if it’s turned up past noon. There’s also a considerable amount of noise coming from the tank. I cleaned the RCA jacks with deoxit and the connection is good. I know these tanks tend to fail over time, but I would like to figure out if it’s the tank or something else. Anyone familiar with this happening?
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Originally posted by Steelwitch View PostOkay y’all, I’ve learned a valuable lesson today— I reflowed the solder on the tip and ground connections on the Reverb tank and now the reverb works! There is another present issue where the reverb trails off into feedback if it’s turned up past noon. There’s also a considerable amount of noise coming from the tank. I cleaned the RCA jacks with deoxit and the connection is good. I know these tanks tend to fail over time, but I would like to figure out if it’s the tank or something else. Anyone familiar with this happening?
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Doc, you stated that you issue is not caused by acoustic feedback/vibration. Can you post some of the troubleshooting steps you've already taken to eliminate this as the problem, and whatever else you have done?
This will help us help you by not covering ground you've already covered. Thanks.If I have a 50% chance of guessing the right answer, I guess wrong 80% of the time.
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Originally posted by doctorock View PostSteelwitch did you ever solve this one?
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