I have a battle-scarred Vox AC30-6/TB blowing it's T500mA HT fuse. Initially, when it and it's partner in crime came in, both with labels stating NO Output, the one with the Greenback 12's worked fine, apart from it's Vibrato/Tremolo switches worn out, rotating past the stops and it's Tolex covering in shameful condition. This one didn't come up out of S/B. Both have their 5VAC heater wires directly coupled to the pwr xfmr secondary, and I'm switching the cathode circuit for Standby Mute, as I've done with all of our AC30-6/TB's. And, of course, moved the power supply wire to Pin 8 from Pin 2 where the factory had screwed up on the rectifier tube.
The Littelfuse 218.500HXP T500mA fuse I removed had the explosion appearance inside the glass tube. I replaced the unmarked 5AR4 rectifier tube after first replacing the fuse. It did power up, and I had output, but I also had a fair amount of hum that I didn't have on the other AC30. I replaced the rectifier tube with new J/J 5AR4. Stopped there to address the Tolex covering on the cabinet, as a fresh roll of black gaffer's tape arrived. Finished that task, cursing the roadies who seem to have it in for any Vox amp, and put the chassis back into the cabinet. I had checked my service notes from June 2018, to see I had then installed a fresh matched quad set of EL84's.
After powering it up, within 2 minutes, I heard the brief groan of the power transformer object, looked to see the S/B lamp had gone out, and the mains current had dropped down. HT fuse blew again. Sigh.........
I looked up a number of AC30-6/TB schematics, looking to see just where the HT fuse was located. Got several opinions from different revisions, stopped to ring out where it actually is. Sits between Pin 8 of the rectifier tube and the junction of the O/T Centertap, the input to the choke and the input to the 47uF/450V 1st stage supply filter (recent Nichicon VX series). Choke is a Drake Transformer 292-767 Choke, 4895 date code, DCR measures 437 ohms, which seems high to me, but don't know.
For the fuse to blow in that time, the fuse data sheet suggests around 200% current was flowing for that to open. It didn't leave black soot inside the replacement fuse, but still, I got somebody pulling too much current.
I haven't yet pulled the power tubes out or swapped them (I do have another matched set on hand). I thought about leaving the HT fuse out, and substituting one of my lab HV supplies to feed the plate circuit to see what's up. I can't say I'm a big fan of extracting the main amp board on these, having to pull all the preamp tubes, remove the control panel PCB, and unsnap all of the misaligned plastic standoffs that break.
ac3093pa.pdf
The Littelfuse 218.500HXP T500mA fuse I removed had the explosion appearance inside the glass tube. I replaced the unmarked 5AR4 rectifier tube after first replacing the fuse. It did power up, and I had output, but I also had a fair amount of hum that I didn't have on the other AC30. I replaced the rectifier tube with new J/J 5AR4. Stopped there to address the Tolex covering on the cabinet, as a fresh roll of black gaffer's tape arrived. Finished that task, cursing the roadies who seem to have it in for any Vox amp, and put the chassis back into the cabinet. I had checked my service notes from June 2018, to see I had then installed a fresh matched quad set of EL84's.
After powering it up, within 2 minutes, I heard the brief groan of the power transformer object, looked to see the S/B lamp had gone out, and the mains current had dropped down. HT fuse blew again. Sigh.........
I looked up a number of AC30-6/TB schematics, looking to see just where the HT fuse was located. Got several opinions from different revisions, stopped to ring out where it actually is. Sits between Pin 8 of the rectifier tube and the junction of the O/T Centertap, the input to the choke and the input to the 47uF/450V 1st stage supply filter (recent Nichicon VX series). Choke is a Drake Transformer 292-767 Choke, 4895 date code, DCR measures 437 ohms, which seems high to me, but don't know.
For the fuse to blow in that time, the fuse data sheet suggests around 200% current was flowing for that to open. It didn't leave black soot inside the replacement fuse, but still, I got somebody pulling too much current.
I haven't yet pulled the power tubes out or swapped them (I do have another matched set on hand). I thought about leaving the HT fuse out, and substituting one of my lab HV supplies to feed the plate circuit to see what's up. I can't say I'm a big fan of extracting the main amp board on these, having to pull all the preamp tubes, remove the control panel PCB, and unsnap all of the misaligned plastic standoffs that break.
ac3093pa.pdf
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