I had an Orange AD30 in about a year ago that had charcoaled one of it's filament supply connectors. The way this is set up is the two filament wires from the PT terminate at push on connectors. Then it gets paralleled off to two small plastic push on connectors. One supplies four of the tubes filaments via a daisy chain of these same little plastic connectors and some very thin wires, each plugging in next to the socket, and then off to the next one, etc. There are two of these daisy chains, one services one half of the tubes, athe other services the other half.
Last time, one of the little connectors got so hot it burnt up itself and some of the board. I cut off the connector and spliced it to the lamp socket, problem solved. Until it comes back today with the same problem on the other connector, burnt to a crisp. This time I soldered some hefty solid push back wire from the transformer push ons at the board, to the pilot lamp terminals. Then I spliced some proper gauge wire from the lamp terminals to the good end of the second daisy chain. Now there is a good solid run to the distro point of the two paralleled daisy chains.
I wouldn't place money on there never being another issue with filaments on this, because the wire is so damn thin, and each tube gets it's current thru a little push on with a dab of glue. Did these engineers try to figure out exactly just how chintzy they could go with this? I mean I understand why they used the daisy chains, it makes for faster assembly, but would it have killed them to use a proper guage wire in the filament circuit no less?
Last time, one of the little connectors got so hot it burnt up itself and some of the board. I cut off the connector and spliced it to the lamp socket, problem solved. Until it comes back today with the same problem on the other connector, burnt to a crisp. This time I soldered some hefty solid push back wire from the transformer push ons at the board, to the pilot lamp terminals. Then I spliced some proper gauge wire from the lamp terminals to the good end of the second daisy chain. Now there is a good solid run to the distro point of the two paralleled daisy chains.
I wouldn't place money on there never being another issue with filaments on this, because the wire is so damn thin, and each tube gets it's current thru a little push on with a dab of glue. Did these engineers try to figure out exactly just how chintzy they could go with this? I mean I understand why they used the daisy chains, it makes for faster assembly, but would it have killed them to use a proper guage wire in the filament circuit no less?
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