Greetings from chilly Sydney.
I’m hoping you can help me out with a Marshall JTM60. It came in as “not working”. I got that part going OK. It was a crack between pad and track on V1. I must say that this is probably the weakest PCB I have ever seen. Another tech before me had obviously struggled with the same issues. So many lifted and lost solder pads. I wouldn’t be surprised if this remaining fault lied in that cause.
The output is exceeding low and I am going nuts trying to find the reason, so I turn to my mentors once more. As a picture tells a thousand words, I have entered voltages on the 2 parts of the schematic (PI and power tubes). The scope shots are: Blue trace monitors the speaker out. (The speaker is a Weber Tru-Load set to, and measures, 16ohm). The Yellow trace moves to different test locations. The numbers in the brackets are the values at clipping.
The signal starts clipping at around 5VAC RMS at the speaker, and as you can see from the scope, its an already ugly signal at an output of 1.5w. The volume knob is at around 2.
Increasing the volume knob, makes the signal very ugly, but not getting past the clipping voltage levels. I need to see around 25-28VAC RMS for the rated output.
The bias is set to -39v at pin 5, which gives a bias current of 35 & 36mA at a plate Vp=462VDC. I checked the voltage at the pins on the 2 EL34s and all looks good. As you can see on the marked up schematic Vp=462 and Vs=454V and Vg=-39v.
The plate has a lot of ripple even after I replaced the filter caps. 7.8VAC p-p with no signal increasing to 21.2VAC p-p at clipping (I noticed my typo of 2.12VAC on the marked up schematic). Oddly, at clipping the signal at the EL34 plates is 53VAC on V105 and 25VAC on V106.
In addition to changing all the 28 year old filter caps, I have tried new tubes in the PI and power tube positions.
And so after 7 hours on this piece of s**t, I’m hoping you can give me some advice.
Chris
I’m hoping you can help me out with a Marshall JTM60. It came in as “not working”. I got that part going OK. It was a crack between pad and track on V1. I must say that this is probably the weakest PCB I have ever seen. Another tech before me had obviously struggled with the same issues. So many lifted and lost solder pads. I wouldn’t be surprised if this remaining fault lied in that cause.
The output is exceeding low and I am going nuts trying to find the reason, so I turn to my mentors once more. As a picture tells a thousand words, I have entered voltages on the 2 parts of the schematic (PI and power tubes). The scope shots are: Blue trace monitors the speaker out. (The speaker is a Weber Tru-Load set to, and measures, 16ohm). The Yellow trace moves to different test locations. The numbers in the brackets are the values at clipping.
The signal starts clipping at around 5VAC RMS at the speaker, and as you can see from the scope, its an already ugly signal at an output of 1.5w. The volume knob is at around 2.
Increasing the volume knob, makes the signal very ugly, but not getting past the clipping voltage levels. I need to see around 25-28VAC RMS for the rated output.
The bias is set to -39v at pin 5, which gives a bias current of 35 & 36mA at a plate Vp=462VDC. I checked the voltage at the pins on the 2 EL34s and all looks good. As you can see on the marked up schematic Vp=462 and Vs=454V and Vg=-39v.
The plate has a lot of ripple even after I replaced the filter caps. 7.8VAC p-p with no signal increasing to 21.2VAC p-p at clipping (I noticed my typo of 2.12VAC on the marked up schematic). Oddly, at clipping the signal at the EL34 plates is 53VAC on V105 and 25VAC on V106.
In addition to changing all the 28 year old filter caps, I have tried new tubes in the PI and power tube positions.
And so after 7 hours on this piece of s**t, I’m hoping you can give me some advice.
Chris
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