We had a 70's Musicmaster Bass amp that came in for general cleaning/service (dates to '79, it looks like).
The molded plug end had been replaced by an old 3-prong replacement with screw terminals. We see this a lot, and I always check the condition and wiring inside. More often than not, it's a disaster and it gets replaced–as this one did. One of the other routine checks I make, particularly in vintage amps, is confirming the fuse value and rating is the one specified.
So, after replacing the mains power cord with a new molded plug, I went to check the fuse and.. there was no fuse. Not like, the fuse was missing from the fuse holder. I mean, there was no mains fuse at all, and there never was in this amp!!. I double checked on the schematic and confirmed that it was designed and built without one, which is crazy to me. It has a UL sticker on the back panel as well. Apparently, fender installed what appears to be a thermal fuse in some other/later models.
Inside, there was the typical 70's fender tag strip with one of the legs of the incoming mains coupled to the chassis with the blue radial cap. The cap was removed, and installed an inline cap from the live to the power switch.
Before choosing a value, I ran the amp into clipping at full power, while monitoring the mains current draw. The mains current didn't exceed much more than ≈500mA at full output, so I chose a value of 1A/slow.
Have any of you run into this on this model?
The molded plug end had been replaced by an old 3-prong replacement with screw terminals. We see this a lot, and I always check the condition and wiring inside. More often than not, it's a disaster and it gets replaced–as this one did. One of the other routine checks I make, particularly in vintage amps, is confirming the fuse value and rating is the one specified.
So, after replacing the mains power cord with a new molded plug, I went to check the fuse and.. there was no fuse. Not like, the fuse was missing from the fuse holder. I mean, there was no mains fuse at all, and there never was in this amp!!. I double checked on the schematic and confirmed that it was designed and built without one, which is crazy to me. It has a UL sticker on the back panel as well. Apparently, fender installed what appears to be a thermal fuse in some other/later models.
Inside, there was the typical 70's fender tag strip with one of the legs of the incoming mains coupled to the chassis with the blue radial cap. The cap was removed, and installed an inline cap from the live to the power switch.
Before choosing a value, I ran the amp into clipping at full power, while monitoring the mains current draw. The mains current didn't exceed much more than ≈500mA at full output, so I chose a value of 1A/slow.
Have any of you run into this on this model?
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