I would really like to fix this myself, but I'm a noob at electronics.
1) would this community put up with a noob asking noob questions as I try to troubleshoot this myself? If yes please skip down if you want to read more about my adventure so far.
2) if no...can anyone recommend a decent electronics technician in the Chicago or Milwaukee area? Preferably in Lake County Illinois or Kenosha County Wisconsin...but I'll drive semi-far (60-90 miles) on a strong recommendation.
Backstory
I have heard so many good things about this amp that when I saw this sad looking California Blonde in the corner of a local shop for dirt cheap ($40) "as is, does not power on"...I decided to take a chance. Thinking if I could fix it for <$100, I'd feel like Mel Fisher finding the Atocha. If I could fix it for between $100-$200...then it's still a really good deal. If I fix it for $200-$300....then I could probably just buy a new used one that already works. I figure it's worth a shot...and I'm in really no hurry to fix this thing. Some previous owner painted the top black...so I call her "Blacktop" now. I also figure as I go along this adventure I'll learn something along the way and probably meet some cool cats.
1st Troubleshooting session
During my noob troubleshooting session, I plugged Blacktop into a GFCI outlet....and the the outlet trips. I check and the power on Blacktop is off. I unplug her, make sure she is powered off, reset the GFCI, plug her back in...and the outlet flips again. I try the same thing but start with the power on....unplug her, turn the power on, reset the GFCI, plug her in, and the GFCI trips.
I scratch my head, search the web and find a bunch of schematics that I don't understand. (links below). Unscrew the head from the cabinet (that's how I know it's circa 1997), do the same stuff above and get the same results. I unplug her poke around a little bit, and nothing jumps out at me...so I take to the interwebs to see if there are sites that might help me along the way. I find this board and on the advice of user/nsubulysses, am now posting this treatise.
I think there is a short and my 1st thought is that it's in the transformer. A new transformer from Mercury Magnetics is $175...so now I'm thinkin I really need to DIY this because with a normal electronics tech troubleshooting fee + my original cost + the new transformer...I'm going to get close to my $300 marker real quick.
Other things I noticed
- the accessible fuse (from the back panel) wasn't blown
- there is a weird looking fuse soldered from the IEC to the fuse...(red arrow in one of the pics and close up in another), it looked blown but I couldn't read the writing on it, so I snipped it off and still can't read the writing on it. It was attached when the GFCI tripped on plugging Blacktop in. I didn't try to recreate the GFCI trip condition after I snipped off this fuse.
So my few noob questions right now are...
1) is there a way that noob with a DMM, wire snips, beginner solder skills, a willingness to learn, an IQ above 90, and basic logic skills can determine if the transformer is really the problem? pics of Blacktop's innards are in the link below. My thought is if I pull the transformer out of the amp, and then put power to it...I could measure it with my DMM somehow to see if it is shorting? I just don't know what to measure. I figure I can frankentape/clip the transformer to an outlet to get it power (since I don't have any super cool bench electronic testing stuff). I know there is safety to consider here, but when I've accidentally connected the circuit from a household 110 outlet with my fingers...it just scares me and gives me a shock.
1a) if the transformer is what is causing the short, what should I check next upstream? I would think that something caused the transformer to fail...it wouldn't seem like it would be a component from the board, but I have no way to know or many years of experience to know something like, "yep...it's probably this or that because of you know what".
1b) if the transformer is the initial culprit...is there a way to back into the specs of the transformer? I wonder if there are cheaper ones out there (not as good as the hand made Mercury Magnetic ones)...but also not $175. There are only 3 wires coming off the transformer.
1c) if the transformer is not what is causing the short...what should I check next?
2) how can I identify the weird looking fuse? I can't read the writing on it. Maybe from the schematics...but from what I can tell on the schematics, this extra fuse doesn't look like it's on the schematics.
so that's where I'm at right now. Thanks in advance to any "rescuers" that take pity and help me limp along this path.
Peace!
JimE
Specs that I found online...all are newer than 1997, some post Fender purchase of SWR
link to California Blonde Specs
https://support.fender.com/hc/en-us/..._Complete_.pdf
link to another set of California Specs
https://support.fender.com/hc/en-us/..._Complete_.pdf
images of Blacktop that might be relevant to this post
https://imgur.com/a/zt8ePVk
1) would this community put up with a noob asking noob questions as I try to troubleshoot this myself? If yes please skip down if you want to read more about my adventure so far.
2) if no...can anyone recommend a decent electronics technician in the Chicago or Milwaukee area? Preferably in Lake County Illinois or Kenosha County Wisconsin...but I'll drive semi-far (60-90 miles) on a strong recommendation.
Backstory
I have heard so many good things about this amp that when I saw this sad looking California Blonde in the corner of a local shop for dirt cheap ($40) "as is, does not power on"...I decided to take a chance. Thinking if I could fix it for <$100, I'd feel like Mel Fisher finding the Atocha. If I could fix it for between $100-$200...then it's still a really good deal. If I fix it for $200-$300....then I could probably just buy a new used one that already works. I figure it's worth a shot...and I'm in really no hurry to fix this thing. Some previous owner painted the top black...so I call her "Blacktop" now. I also figure as I go along this adventure I'll learn something along the way and probably meet some cool cats.
1st Troubleshooting session
During my noob troubleshooting session, I plugged Blacktop into a GFCI outlet....and the the outlet trips. I check and the power on Blacktop is off. I unplug her, make sure she is powered off, reset the GFCI, plug her back in...and the outlet flips again. I try the same thing but start with the power on....unplug her, turn the power on, reset the GFCI, plug her in, and the GFCI trips.
I scratch my head, search the web and find a bunch of schematics that I don't understand. (links below). Unscrew the head from the cabinet (that's how I know it's circa 1997), do the same stuff above and get the same results. I unplug her poke around a little bit, and nothing jumps out at me...so I take to the interwebs to see if there are sites that might help me along the way. I find this board and on the advice of user/nsubulysses, am now posting this treatise.
I think there is a short and my 1st thought is that it's in the transformer. A new transformer from Mercury Magnetics is $175...so now I'm thinkin I really need to DIY this because with a normal electronics tech troubleshooting fee + my original cost + the new transformer...I'm going to get close to my $300 marker real quick.
Other things I noticed
- the accessible fuse (from the back panel) wasn't blown
- there is a weird looking fuse soldered from the IEC to the fuse...(red arrow in one of the pics and close up in another), it looked blown but I couldn't read the writing on it, so I snipped it off and still can't read the writing on it. It was attached when the GFCI tripped on plugging Blacktop in. I didn't try to recreate the GFCI trip condition after I snipped off this fuse.
So my few noob questions right now are...
1) is there a way that noob with a DMM, wire snips, beginner solder skills, a willingness to learn, an IQ above 90, and basic logic skills can determine if the transformer is really the problem? pics of Blacktop's innards are in the link below. My thought is if I pull the transformer out of the amp, and then put power to it...I could measure it with my DMM somehow to see if it is shorting? I just don't know what to measure. I figure I can frankentape/clip the transformer to an outlet to get it power (since I don't have any super cool bench electronic testing stuff). I know there is safety to consider here, but when I've accidentally connected the circuit from a household 110 outlet with my fingers...it just scares me and gives me a shock.
1a) if the transformer is what is causing the short, what should I check next upstream? I would think that something caused the transformer to fail...it wouldn't seem like it would be a component from the board, but I have no way to know or many years of experience to know something like, "yep...it's probably this or that because of you know what".
1b) if the transformer is the initial culprit...is there a way to back into the specs of the transformer? I wonder if there are cheaper ones out there (not as good as the hand made Mercury Magnetic ones)...but also not $175. There are only 3 wires coming off the transformer.
1c) if the transformer is not what is causing the short...what should I check next?
2) how can I identify the weird looking fuse? I can't read the writing on it. Maybe from the schematics...but from what I can tell on the schematics, this extra fuse doesn't look like it's on the schematics.
so that's where I'm at right now. Thanks in advance to any "rescuers" that take pity and help me limp along this path.
Peace!
JimE
Specs that I found online...all are newer than 1997, some post Fender purchase of SWR
link to California Blonde Specs
https://support.fender.com/hc/en-us/..._Complete_.pdf
link to another set of California Specs
https://support.fender.com/hc/en-us/..._Complete_.pdf
images of Blacktop that might be relevant to this post
https://imgur.com/a/zt8ePVk
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