JCM900 50W head comes in with a strange issue: (schematic below)
Marshall-JCM900-Dualrev-50W-4500-Schematic.pdf
Customer complains that the amp is humming/buzzing in standby, and when the amp is fully on, the noise is louder and continues to get louder.
Noise in "Standby", we asked. So, we plugged it in and confirmed it's just as the customer says. (see audio clip)
JCM900_Noise_Issue_6-8-19•US•.mp3 - The audio you first hear is the amp with just the power switch in the on position. When the audio changes and the noise gets louder, is when the amp standby switch is turned to the on position. Then the amp is put back in standby for a few moments and then turned completely off.
This is a strange one indeed. The amp theoretically should pass no audio in standby. But, there you have it. I pulled the two existing tubes and tried some bench output tubes and got the same symptoms. To compound the weirdness, I pulled output tubes altogether and still got the same noise in standby! WTF.
The quick version of troubleshooting was, the HT voltages all measured okay. Voltages at the tube pins seemed fine as well, with both grids measuring a bias of around -41V and change.
I was also getting +/- 16V on the opamp chips where you would expect them as well.
(One other thing to note, was I was not able to pass signal to the output injecting a sine wave into the input, or in through the effects return in failure mode)
So, it was time to do some signal tracing through from the input through the output stage. At first, I was getting a noise and distorted signal (not my injected signal) at pin 5 of the closest chip to the input. I mistakenly thought it was IC1, but it wasn't. In any case, I went to probe signal on the plate of V1 and accidentally shorted two pins together, which was evident by the sound and visible spark. Happened to a few other people before... maybe.
I powered it down, and went to check the fuses assuming I probably blew one of them. Now, here's another really weird part of the story. The 900 has a fuse for the output tubes on the back panel, not traditional HT fuse found on many other Marshalls. When I pulled the fuse anyway to check it, it came apart and the end was stuck in the fuse holder cap. The mains fuse was fine, so I replaced the output tubes fuse with a new 500mA fuse it specified. When I powered it back up and went back to signal tracing, I probed nice clean sine waves through all stages into the Output stage. I turned to my boss and said/questioned "no way that fuse was the issue, right??" With his original tubes back in, took it off the dummy load and put it into the speaker, and no noise. Testing it with the guitar through both channels, and the amp was showing no sign of the original issue. We set it aside, for further testing and I moved on to replacing an OT in an old SVT.
But, what the Hell?
Any thoughts?
Marshall-JCM900-Dualrev-50W-4500-Schematic.pdf
Customer complains that the amp is humming/buzzing in standby, and when the amp is fully on, the noise is louder and continues to get louder.
Noise in "Standby", we asked. So, we plugged it in and confirmed it's just as the customer says. (see audio clip)
JCM900_Noise_Issue_6-8-19•US•.mp3 - The audio you first hear is the amp with just the power switch in the on position. When the audio changes and the noise gets louder, is when the amp standby switch is turned to the on position. Then the amp is put back in standby for a few moments and then turned completely off.
This is a strange one indeed. The amp theoretically should pass no audio in standby. But, there you have it. I pulled the two existing tubes and tried some bench output tubes and got the same symptoms. To compound the weirdness, I pulled output tubes altogether and still got the same noise in standby! WTF.
The quick version of troubleshooting was, the HT voltages all measured okay. Voltages at the tube pins seemed fine as well, with both grids measuring a bias of around -41V and change.
I was also getting +/- 16V on the opamp chips where you would expect them as well.
(One other thing to note, was I was not able to pass signal to the output injecting a sine wave into the input, or in through the effects return in failure mode)
So, it was time to do some signal tracing through from the input through the output stage. At first, I was getting a noise and distorted signal (not my injected signal) at pin 5 of the closest chip to the input. I mistakenly thought it was IC1, but it wasn't. In any case, I went to probe signal on the plate of V1 and accidentally shorted two pins together, which was evident by the sound and visible spark. Happened to a few other people before... maybe.
I powered it down, and went to check the fuses assuming I probably blew one of them. Now, here's another really weird part of the story. The 900 has a fuse for the output tubes on the back panel, not traditional HT fuse found on many other Marshalls. When I pulled the fuse anyway to check it, it came apart and the end was stuck in the fuse holder cap. The mains fuse was fine, so I replaced the output tubes fuse with a new 500mA fuse it specified. When I powered it back up and went back to signal tracing, I probed nice clean sine waves through all stages into the Output stage. I turned to my boss and said/questioned "no way that fuse was the issue, right??" With his original tubes back in, took it off the dummy load and put it into the speaker, and no noise. Testing it with the guitar through both channels, and the amp was showing no sign of the original issue. We set it aside, for further testing and I moved on to replacing an OT in an old SVT.
But, what the Hell?
Any thoughts?
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