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67 Super Reverb ugly distortion
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Vintagekiki
No, the amp isn't working yet. I'm getting together a more credible signal generator and will continue testing once I have it working.
I've also printed off the entire thread and am going to review every thing that's been suggested to make sure I haven't missed anything.
Thanks for your continued interest! You and all of the other posters on this thread have taught me a lot!
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I'm going to relate an anecdote from years ago.
I had a silverface Bassman head that worked fine, then seemingly started cutting out momentarily while playing. A bunch of techs took a stab at it, including Gerald Weber, twice. Nobody could fix it.
Turns out that what was happening, is that I had started to play louder in the band I was in. I was resting my palm on the strings just in front of the bridge. With the pickups I was using, as I picked, I would slightly compress the lower strings sending very low frequency signals to the amp.
The amp was trying it's best to amplify those 1 to 10 hertz, or whatever, pulses, but just didn't have capability. It would spend all the available power trying to amplify those low transients and the audible signal would cut out. I could even make a tremolo sound by hitting a note or chord, and push my palm into the low strings at intervals.
Of course, once the problem was identified, it could be properly addressed. The amp worked as originally intended, but I was definitely not using it as Fender intended.
Some small circuit tweaks and a bass cut cap on the input cured it right up.
The moral? This problem might be outside "the box". Is there a small strand of steel wool stuck on the reverb tank recovery that only shorts on high volume transients? ... or something like that?
I just had a guy bring in a Les Paul that had been to a Gibson warranty tech but still had "ground noise issues".
The "issue" was that he was using coated strings, which had partially worn through, so as he played, he was alternately grounding and ungrounding and getting that little static pop that you hear, a gajillion times as he made and broke, and made contact with every wind along the strings.
EDIT: I forgot to add the time a Traynor head would make a godawful static on one note in particular. After some sleuthing, and figuring out the amp HAD to be on the speaker cab, so the problem was vibrational, but poking everything inside failed to make any noise, I saw that on the most problematic note, at volume, one ceramic disc cap with slightly long leads, would resonate and physically oscillate quite a bit further than I would have guessed it could, and was shorting on whatever lead was nearby. BzzzzzzTttt!
A little bend and some goop, good to go.
Did a voice coil rub get ruled out? Does this amp make the same ugly distortion plugged into a completely different cabinet?
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Originally posted by Sweetfinger View PostI just had a guy bring in a Les Paul that had been to a Gibson warranty tech but still had "ground noise issues".
The "issue" was that he was using coated strings, which had partially worn through, so as he played, he was alternately grounding and ungrounding and getting that little static pop that you hear, a gajillion times as he made and broke, and made contact with every wind along the strings."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Turns out that what was happening, is that I had started to play louder in the band I was in. I was resting my palm on the strings just in front of the bridge. With the pickups I was using, as I picked, I would slightly compress the lower strings sending very low frequency signals to the amp.- Own Opinions Only -
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Hello to All of You Very Helpful People
I was able to fix the amp by replacing the output transformer. Not exactly what I wanted to do to a vintage amp. I realize that I had been resisting that probable outcome, and trying every other possible fix first.
In getting to the final diagnosis I had to enlist the help of a technically more experienced friend, Russell. I will quote his e-mail that he sent me where he correctly surmised that the transformer was bad. I had asked how he came to the conclusion and he said:
" Well, a couple of things. It's a 2 ohm secondary, so ohms measurement was of no use. I noticed that, as you said, it was ok at low levels, but when pushed, it began to distort as though something was 'shorting' showing an increase in current draw, yet a reduction in output level.
Somewhere along the line, I noticed that there's a feedback line from the secondary to the driver tube. Eventually, I was able to get it to exhibit the same symptom with NO output. Current draw with no signal to the speaker output. It would come and go for a while and finally gave up. There's signal going to the primary side and nothing coming out. It still may start out ok, but eventually quits... thus; shorted output transformer.
Signal in at roughly 'guitar' level, load resistor was 8 ohm at first, then 4. The symptom got more pronounced as the load was lowered towards the design limit of 2. It just all pointed towards a bad transformer in the end I guess. All done with signal generator and scope, DVM for voltage checks, which seemed to confirm a short somewhere, yet "none could be found".
Hope this is helpful to someone in the future. Thanks to all of the people who read and followed my lengthy posts and offered help. I really learned a lot with this one.
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Back around post #63 (pg.2) a simple neon bulb tester was recommended and the schematic was also posted.
I'd think it may have detected the OT problem, but it would also have been very good to know if it could not.
From reading through the rest, I get the impression the neon bulb test was not done?
Glad to hear you got it fixed though! Thanks for posting the update.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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G1 -
You’re correct - I didn’t make the neon bulb test rig.
I was admittedly impatient to get the Amp fixed. I also wasn’t sure of what type of neon bulb or where to get it..the closing of Radio Shack makes it a little harder to go out and grab small items like that...
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