Hi there
I recapped and changed a few pots on a Laney VC30 recently, I changed the 3 15uf polarised electrolytics and the big dual 50uf can capacitor. All was fairly straightforward but I noticed an alarming trait, accidentally.
There is a ground connection coming off the PCB, meeting with the negative of the big can cap and then bolted to the chassis. When the wire from the PCB to the chassis ground is removed/desoldered then I get -300v dc on the chassis compared to the guitar input signal and ground connectors, and as a result the guitar strings too...
The main earth connection (from various points on the chassis and circuit to the ground pin of the power cord) is good so I think the B+ potential is getting to somewhere on the signal path rather than a bad earth on the chassis. On the schematic only the negative of the big can cap and the HT fuse are connected to THAT ground point, but the ground of several other components meets on the PCB before coming off a pad and meeting with the big can cap and chassis ground. I suppose I could hypothesise that the B+, not grounded now, is travelling back to the ground around the input stages and that's why it's appearing on the I/P jacks, but that's just conjecture and I'm really not sure....
So what I'd like to know is, is this normal??? I'm inclined to think not...but if I remove the HT fuse then the amp dies and is safe, so is this expected behaviour, and the HT fuse is there in the event that this ground wire comes loose and the guitar strings develop a potential? That still seems a bit scary...
Or does it point to a shorted cap further up the circuit or something similar? I can't SEE a path for the B+ around the circuit on the schematic for it to somehow get into the signal path but its hard to see what other components ground at the same point so what could potentially be going on.
On the schematic the PCB of my model is 9072-4, page 6. The focus area is down the bottom in the middle. The loose wire would be severing the connection directly after pad 57. Pad 56 and 57 have the HT fuse between them, between pads 51 and 58 is the 100uf can cap.
Thanks for reading and any help that can be offered!
I'm UK btw, if that matters!
Sorry can't post attachments yet, here's a link to the schematic - https://elektrotanya.com/laney_vc30-.../download.html
I recapped and changed a few pots on a Laney VC30 recently, I changed the 3 15uf polarised electrolytics and the big dual 50uf can capacitor. All was fairly straightforward but I noticed an alarming trait, accidentally.
There is a ground connection coming off the PCB, meeting with the negative of the big can cap and then bolted to the chassis. When the wire from the PCB to the chassis ground is removed/desoldered then I get -300v dc on the chassis compared to the guitar input signal and ground connectors, and as a result the guitar strings too...
The main earth connection (from various points on the chassis and circuit to the ground pin of the power cord) is good so I think the B+ potential is getting to somewhere on the signal path rather than a bad earth on the chassis. On the schematic only the negative of the big can cap and the HT fuse are connected to THAT ground point, but the ground of several other components meets on the PCB before coming off a pad and meeting with the big can cap and chassis ground. I suppose I could hypothesise that the B+, not grounded now, is travelling back to the ground around the input stages and that's why it's appearing on the I/P jacks, but that's just conjecture and I'm really not sure....
So what I'd like to know is, is this normal??? I'm inclined to think not...but if I remove the HT fuse then the amp dies and is safe, so is this expected behaviour, and the HT fuse is there in the event that this ground wire comes loose and the guitar strings develop a potential? That still seems a bit scary...
Or does it point to a shorted cap further up the circuit or something similar? I can't SEE a path for the B+ around the circuit on the schematic for it to somehow get into the signal path but its hard to see what other components ground at the same point so what could potentially be going on.
On the schematic the PCB of my model is 9072-4, page 6. The focus area is down the bottom in the middle. The loose wire would be severing the connection directly after pad 57. Pad 56 and 57 have the HT fuse between them, between pads 51 and 58 is the 100uf can cap.
Thanks for reading and any help that can be offered!
I'm UK btw, if that matters!
Sorry can't post attachments yet, here's a link to the schematic - https://elektrotanya.com/laney_vc30-.../download.html
Comment