Ad Widget

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Princeton help

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Princeton help

    I have a silver face princeton here . Its seems to me it doesnt have a lot of volume--even on 10. SHouldnt this amp be somewhat loud turned up all the way?
    It also has very faint distortion to it. you can hear it as a note decays . Heres what ive tried so far:

    new speaker
    swapped all tubes out
    checked all resistors
    checked all caps and paralelled a .1 across the .1 and .022 's in there. Paralelled a 25uf across the 25uf caps
    cleaned the pots
    moved all the wires around

    Any ideas ??

    possibly the OT ?

  • #2
    You did all the consumer stuff, now start troubleshooting the circuit. What is the B+ voltage: at the output plates, at the output screens, at the other nodes for the preamp and phase splitter. What is the bias on the power tubes?

    Apply a signal and trace it with a scope or an AC meter. Where does it diminish rather than grow?

    is there reasonable plate voltage on all the triodes? How about the cathode voltages, all within reason? Any DC voltage on any grids? REmember that cathode followers and some phase splitters will have substantial DC on the grids, but at the same time there will be higher DC on the associated cathodes.

    If the DCs are all OK, then trace the signal, a bad coupling cap could hang you up.

    The amp ought to get loud, of course nothing like a Twin Reverb or something
    Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

    Comment


    • #3
      i dont have any way to apply a signal to trace it--ill try to come up with something.

      the voltages look ok to me
      B+ was about 378v i believe
      367/368v at the power tube plates
      -29 at pin 5
      Bias current is 20/26ma (6V6)

      preamp:
      V1 pin1=156v
      V1 pin6 =151v
      V2 pin1 =2.2v
      V2 pin6 =179v

      no voltage at grids
      0 cathode volts

      i mentioned before that i paralleled all the .1 and .022 caps,etc.. with a good cap. Wouldnt the amp come to life and get loud as soon as i applied that cap across a leaky or shorted cap ?

      Comment


      • #4
        ok--i rigged up a small cd player to run some signal thru the amp. I probed everything inside of it. The ONLY place you hear any signal is when i touch the plates of the output tubes--BUT this signal is about 75% quieter than the normal signal directly to the speaker. That it---no where else i can hear anything .

        Comment


        • #5
          Dart,

          So when you apply the signal to pin 5 of the 6V6s you get nothing? Then your output stage isn't working. Enzo asked but got no reply so I'll reitterate - do you have any voltage/adequate voltage at your screen grid (pin 4). And is the bias current number you supplied for two tubes? If so the 10-13 ma/tube is only 3.5-4.5 watts per tube static dissipation - about 28-35%- and I suspect that the -29 bias voltage may have your output stage pretty well cut off. What you want is about 25 ma per tube or so to get in the 70% ball park (or at least not much more - some like as low as 50%).

          A "QAD" (quick and dirty) signal source if you need one is the amps own filament tranny. Just clip a 1K or greater pot across the leads and use the wiper as a signal source - you can use your DMM to set the level to ground because you'll need the entire 6 volts to drive either output tube sufficiently enough to check out the stage (the voltage swing from the PI should be something around 30-40 V P to P so again the -29 seems way too high).

          Rob

          Comment


          • #6
            what im saying is i get about 20ma on one tube and 24ma on the other(bias).

            NO signal when i apply the cd signal to pin 5. only at the plates.But very low

            pin 4 voltage is 373vdc at each output tube

            pin 5 is -29.6vdc at each 6V6

            Comment


            • #7
              Well your static dissipation is a little low but not bad - you could probably drop the bias voltage a bit but this doesn't seem to be your problem. And your screen voltage is OK. So I assume that your signal source is capable of putting out a few volts? What happens if you - with on hand in your pocket - touch a screwdriver to pin 5 while touching the metal shaft. Any hum or pops?

              Since you got a signal - as best I can tell - from the plates to the speaker then out OT should be good and your output tubes seem to be conducting.

              Looking back at your post - no, paralleling a good cap across a leaky or shorted one - which is essentially resistor - should make little change. But paralleling one that was open would work. The leaky cap would need to be taken out of circuit and another cap substituted. But with the -29 on the outputs grids you probably don't have an leaky cap on this stage. Is there any way that the signal is getting shorted to ground? What are the values of your grid return ("grind leak") resistors? And how about the bias feed resistors? Your symptoms seem to be those of a signal short - AC - from pin 5 to ground.

              Rob

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Rob Mercure View Post
                Well your static dissipation is a little low but not bad - you could probably drop the bias voltage a bit but this doesn't seem to be your problem. And your screen voltage is OK. So I assume that your signal source is capable of putting out a few volts? What happens if you - with on hand in your pocket - touch a screwdriver to pin 5 while touching the metal shaft. Any hum or pops? NO--NO POPS OR HUMS

                Since you got a signal - as best I can tell - from the plates to the speaker then out OT should be good and your output tubes seem to be conducting.

                Looking back at your post - no, paralleling a good cap across a leaky or shorted one - which is essentially resistor - should make little change. But paralleling one that was open would work. The leaky cap would need to be taken out of circuit and another cap substituted. But with the -29 on the outputs grids you probably don't have an leaky cap on this stage. Is there any way that the signal is getting shorted to ground? What are the values of your grid return ("grind leak") resistors? And how about the bias feed resistors? Your symptoms seem to be those of a signal short - AC - from pin 5 to ground.

                Rob

                There is a VERY--very faint clik" when i touch pins 3 and 4 on the 6v6's. This is with the vol on 10.

                ALL resistors in the amp test good.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Did we verify the output tube cathodes are connected to ground? From pin 8 or the socket to chassis should measure zero ohms, or 1 ohm if there is a sense resistor.

                  Disconnect the OT secondary wires from the jacks and everything else. Now connect them directly to a speaker with clip wires. I am bypassing potentially shorted output jacks.

                  Touching pin 5 of the 6V6 ought to make a good hum.
                  Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Enzo View Post
                    Did we verify the output tube cathodes are connected to ground? From pin 8 or the socket to chassis should measure zero ohms, or 1 ohm if there is a sense resistor.

                    Disconnect the OT secondary wires from the jacks and everything else. Now connect them directly to a speaker with clip wires. I am bypassing potentially shorted output jacks.

                    Touching pin 5 of the 6V6 ought to make a good hum.

                    cathodes are grounded good

                    connected sec wires directly to speaker = still doesnt seem more than a 2 watt amp

                    touching pin 5 --NO sound

                    touching pins 3 and 4 gives a barely audible click

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      this sounds like a Laney 50w amp i had a while back. It did the same thing--very low output and i couldnt find anything wrong. Turns out it was the OT....

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        You can do a simple resistance check on your output tranny with your meter. Check from center tap to each primary winding. These wires are almost always red,brown and blue. Red is the B+ lead and center tap. From red to blue and brown you should get around 30 to 70 ohms and from blue to brown you should get double that or 60 to 140 ohms. If your output tranny is bad it is shorted not open. If it were open you would get nothing. You may also go back to the Enzo approach and insert your signal to the input. Take a jack with two wires coming off of it. One for tip (signal) and one for ground (sleeve) and make sure they are not shorted. You can connect that jack to any point in the circuit where signal is and send it to the input of another amp or the return of another amp using it as a power amp. If it is strong on the first preamp tube go to the next. Right after the coupling caps are a good place because hopefully the voltage is low there and the risk of shock is reduced. You can hook it up with test leads and just flip the switch. Trace it until you get to the output and find out where it dissapears and you'll most likely find the problem.
                        KB

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Thanks so far for your help guys! Heres what i found today.

                          dark blue to red 154 ohms

                          dk blue to brown 308 ohms

                          red to brown 153.5 ohms

                          I ran a lead out of the princeton , connected to the cathode of V2. This is right before the 6v6 tubes. Ran that into the return of a 100w amp and then into a 4x12 cab. Everything seemed fine--nice and loud.

                          I reversed that and ran the fx send out of the 100w amp into the power section of the princeton. Very low output . sounded like 1 or 2 watts

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Then your loop jacks are corroded are not making good contact. You can try using a deburring tool or something to clean them off but it will most likely return in the future. Changing the loop jacks would be the way to go.
                            KB

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              loop jacks ?? fx loop ? the princeton doesnt have one. The laney 100w has a loop but that amp works perfect.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X