Hello everyboby from Italy, hope you stay at home safe and secure.
Having (unfortunately) lot of spare time due to the lockdown, I'm keeping one amp a day and check if everything is ok....reset bias, change tubes, speakers, try new combination of pre amp, etc
Yesterday was the turn of my loved/hated LANEY GH50L made in UK; I own this amp from long time...bought second hand, rarely used coz is loud and not versatile.
I changed the power tubes (just to try another duet) and rebiased the amp with a bias probe (after reading the plate voltage on pin 3); it was 58mV per tube!! I re-set to 40mV with a plate voltage of 422v circa.
Doing this procedure I noticed that one socket is (or always was) defective.....no good contact on the heaters (at least pin 2 and don't know how many others).
I managed to restore good contacts on both sockets and after that, both the two EL34 are now glowing.
The problem is: I don't know over the years how many hours/mintes the amp has played just with one tube!
Now I have the amp working, with full volume, but with a LOUD HUM coming from the power amp;I say that because I putted a cord on the RETURN (in series mode) and the HUM is still there; GAIN at zero, just opening the volume, the HUM starts. Not hiss or white noise......just HUM. Hiss and white noise starts when I switch the second gain stage, but I can live with it.
So, for what I know "Tubes will make a myriad of strange and seemingly inexplicable sounds. The one thing they wont do is hum. It can, however, seem that way if one or more power tubes go out. When this happens, the natural hum from your power transformer is no longer being phase canceled by the tube that just died. This makes it seem like a bad tube is humming, but in reality, it just isnt silencing the hum anymore. Thats pretty rare, but if it does happen youll need to replace the power tubes."
Do I have to replace the OT? How could I check if the OT is correctely working? I guess working only one half of the power amp for few minutes at a time - but for many years - it may have damaged the OT.
HT fuse is ok; volume seems OK, tubes are glowing with the same intensity
Do I have to replace power tubes (I checked and they work...no shorts)?
Any advice helping me to figure out this HUM, would be very appreciated; as far as I remember, this amp always humming loud but few years ago I was less demanding.....that said 90% of the time, this head has not working (turned off) in my storage room.
Thanks in advance and take care!!!
Palantine
Having (unfortunately) lot of spare time due to the lockdown, I'm keeping one amp a day and check if everything is ok....reset bias, change tubes, speakers, try new combination of pre amp, etc
Yesterday was the turn of my loved/hated LANEY GH50L made in UK; I own this amp from long time...bought second hand, rarely used coz is loud and not versatile.
I changed the power tubes (just to try another duet) and rebiased the amp with a bias probe (after reading the plate voltage on pin 3); it was 58mV per tube!! I re-set to 40mV with a plate voltage of 422v circa.
Doing this procedure I noticed that one socket is (or always was) defective.....no good contact on the heaters (at least pin 2 and don't know how many others).
I managed to restore good contacts on both sockets and after that, both the two EL34 are now glowing.
The problem is: I don't know over the years how many hours/mintes the amp has played just with one tube!
Now I have the amp working, with full volume, but with a LOUD HUM coming from the power amp;I say that because I putted a cord on the RETURN (in series mode) and the HUM is still there; GAIN at zero, just opening the volume, the HUM starts. Not hiss or white noise......just HUM. Hiss and white noise starts when I switch the second gain stage, but I can live with it.
So, for what I know "Tubes will make a myriad of strange and seemingly inexplicable sounds. The one thing they wont do is hum. It can, however, seem that way if one or more power tubes go out. When this happens, the natural hum from your power transformer is no longer being phase canceled by the tube that just died. This makes it seem like a bad tube is humming, but in reality, it just isnt silencing the hum anymore. Thats pretty rare, but if it does happen youll need to replace the power tubes."
Do I have to replace the OT? How could I check if the OT is correctely working? I guess working only one half of the power amp for few minutes at a time - but for many years - it may have damaged the OT.
HT fuse is ok; volume seems OK, tubes are glowing with the same intensity
Do I have to replace power tubes (I checked and they work...no shorts)?
Any advice helping me to figure out this HUM, would be very appreciated; as far as I remember, this amp always humming loud but few years ago I was less demanding.....that said 90% of the time, this head has not working (turned off) in my storage room.
Thanks in advance and take care!!!
Palantine
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