This 2008-vintage Fender Twin Reverb (65 reissue) came in with a nasty buzzing crackling noise on the reverb circuit. The tank itself appears fine. I went thru a few V4 tubes, no change. Removed V4 to listen to see if that noise was still present, and it wasn't. Swapped out the PI tube V6, no change. Not affected by the Vibrato Intensity control, which sums it's modulation signal with the output of V4B. Removed V2 just to eliminate it's contribution to the signal chain, and no change. I also unplugged the tank, and turning up the pot, I was getting the same noise, just not modulated by the crash of the tank. Injected signal into the Reverb return jack, and get the same noise & crackling.
So, removed the chassis to the service cradle, and, since I was hearing some noise on the Reverb pot as well as both Volume Pots, I removed the front panel PCB, removed each of the pots, cleaned / lubed the resistance tracks and put them back onto the PCB, and touched up the solder joints on the input jacks while I had the board out. Put the board back in into the chassis. I also cut the tie wraps Fender had used to bundle the AC mains pri/secondary wires, all laid out straight to where they plug into the main PCB, and twisted each secondary pair, then twisted the three pairs together, laid them back down and plugged them back in.....something I normally do on these amps, just to lower the radiated stray field from the wires. Powered it back up and gave it a listen. Now it's quiet, no more crackling noises or hum buzz. Put the chassis back into the cabinet, tightened up the mtg hardware. All sounded fine again, no crackling. I had it running with burst pink noise while I began screwing down the upper rear panel, and suddenly the noise was back.
Removed the panel, then removed the three rear chassis flange screws that hold it tight against the cabinet roof foil. Amp is quiet again. Pressed the rear of the chassis up against the foil, and had the noise again. So, pulled the chassis back out to see what I missed.
Nothing obvious inside the chassis. All the rear panel hardware was tight. I gave the grounding screws a tweak, just to be sure they were all tight, and did the same with the xfmr mounting hardware. The AC pri/secondary wiring bundle was bulging a little above the surface of the open chassis (sighting with a straight edge), so pushed it down as low as it would go, and did the same with the wires from the Doghouse (power supply cap housing). Opened the Doghouse for inspection, all looked fine there, though had to tighten down the PCB mtg screws a bit. Powered back up, and all is quiet like before. I put my aluminum shield plate onto the top of the chassis to simulate it being mounted, holding it down firmly. No change with that, still quiet.
I turned to the cabinet, finding two large patches of aluminum roof foil torn from the large sheet applied to the cabinet roof. I peeled away some of the edges that were protruding down, then, after turning the cabinet upside down (handle removed), I placed a couple strips of 2" wide gaffers' tape to the roof foil, and cut away the foil that had been folded up onto the side of one wall. The chassis had been really hard to remove from the cabinet to start with, and did require having a thin metal panel slipped in between the roof and the chassis, to run from one end to the other to prevent the chassis from peeling away roof foil, as they just love to do.
So, feeling confident I'd addressed everything, short of ripping off the entire sheet and replacing it with a stapled-down 10mil sheet of aluminum, I re-mounted the chassis. Didn't even bother with the rear flange screws...just wanted to see if it was quiet again.
It wasn't....same noise just as I had when I began. Bloody amp sitting there laughing at me, cackling with it's nastiness. Sigh.........
As I didn't find any components in the Reverb return path respond to prodding with my chop sticks to try and make it misbehave, I'm not sure what I missed. I'm ready to remove the roof foil and cut/install a new sheet of aluminum (roof flashing), and staple it into place. That's an hours task, as you have to gut the cabinet so there's nothing in the way of the staple gun during the installation.
I haven't run into THIS problem before. What have I missed?
So, removed the chassis to the service cradle, and, since I was hearing some noise on the Reverb pot as well as both Volume Pots, I removed the front panel PCB, removed each of the pots, cleaned / lubed the resistance tracks and put them back onto the PCB, and touched up the solder joints on the input jacks while I had the board out. Put the board back in into the chassis. I also cut the tie wraps Fender had used to bundle the AC mains pri/secondary wires, all laid out straight to where they plug into the main PCB, and twisted each secondary pair, then twisted the three pairs together, laid them back down and plugged them back in.....something I normally do on these amps, just to lower the radiated stray field from the wires. Powered it back up and gave it a listen. Now it's quiet, no more crackling noises or hum buzz. Put the chassis back into the cabinet, tightened up the mtg hardware. All sounded fine again, no crackling. I had it running with burst pink noise while I began screwing down the upper rear panel, and suddenly the noise was back.
Removed the panel, then removed the three rear chassis flange screws that hold it tight against the cabinet roof foil. Amp is quiet again. Pressed the rear of the chassis up against the foil, and had the noise again. So, pulled the chassis back out to see what I missed.
Nothing obvious inside the chassis. All the rear panel hardware was tight. I gave the grounding screws a tweak, just to be sure they were all tight, and did the same with the xfmr mounting hardware. The AC pri/secondary wiring bundle was bulging a little above the surface of the open chassis (sighting with a straight edge), so pushed it down as low as it would go, and did the same with the wires from the Doghouse (power supply cap housing). Opened the Doghouse for inspection, all looked fine there, though had to tighten down the PCB mtg screws a bit. Powered back up, and all is quiet like before. I put my aluminum shield plate onto the top of the chassis to simulate it being mounted, holding it down firmly. No change with that, still quiet.
I turned to the cabinet, finding two large patches of aluminum roof foil torn from the large sheet applied to the cabinet roof. I peeled away some of the edges that were protruding down, then, after turning the cabinet upside down (handle removed), I placed a couple strips of 2" wide gaffers' tape to the roof foil, and cut away the foil that had been folded up onto the side of one wall. The chassis had been really hard to remove from the cabinet to start with, and did require having a thin metal panel slipped in between the roof and the chassis, to run from one end to the other to prevent the chassis from peeling away roof foil, as they just love to do.
So, feeling confident I'd addressed everything, short of ripping off the entire sheet and replacing it with a stapled-down 10mil sheet of aluminum, I re-mounted the chassis. Didn't even bother with the rear flange screws...just wanted to see if it was quiet again.
It wasn't....same noise just as I had when I began. Bloody amp sitting there laughing at me, cackling with it's nastiness. Sigh.........
As I didn't find any components in the Reverb return path respond to prodding with my chop sticks to try and make it misbehave, I'm not sure what I missed. I'm ready to remove the roof foil and cut/install a new sheet of aluminum (roof flashing), and staple it into place. That's an hours task, as you have to gut the cabinet so there's nothing in the way of the staple gun during the installation.
I haven't run into THIS problem before. What have I missed?
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