I was given a Peavey KB100 because the owner didn't care to have it fixed. I'm a hobby level electronics and music enthusiast. I could use this amp if I could make it work right.
The problem is the amp sounds a little fuzzy when notes are played. I'm a keyboard player. I use a Yamaha P-85 keyboard. It sounds great when played through my stereo system. But when I play it through the KB100 it sounds like the signal is passing through a low level fuzz box. In other words, there's some distortion when notes are played. Otherwise the amp is silent (no hum).
When I power up the KB100 is takes a minute or so for the volume to come up and level out. It seems like the fuzziness is less noticeable while the volume is coming up.
I measured the voltages across the power supply filter capacitors. Where the diagram says 43 volts I'm getting 41.8 volts. Where the diagram specifies 15 volts I get around 15.5. The 15 volt supply takes a few minutes to stabilize. When the amp is first switched on it starts around 14.9 volts. The 43 volt supply goes the other way. It starts around 42.5 and settles down to 41.8. The + and - supply voltages are within less than 0.5 volts of each other. The same voltage positions measured on the AC scale are about 0.1 volts on the 43 volt supply and .003 on the 15 volt supply.
I'm not sure I'm connecting my keyboard (Yamaha P85) to the KB100 properly. I'm plugging the P85 headphone output into the KB100 power amp input. This, of course, bypasses the preamp in the KB100, which bypasses the volume/tone controls. I assume this is the correct connection since the P85 headphone output is preamplified already. Also, things don't go well at all when I connect the P85 to the normal KB100 inputs.
I purchased capacitors to replace those in the power supply, but I'm not really sure they need to be replaced. As I said above the voltages seem reasonable, at least to my naive mind.
I also purchased some op-amps (4558). I replaced U1 and U7 just because it's easy to do. The high frequency notes seem a little brighter but the fuzziness is still there.
Since the amp is old (vintage 1980's?) I'm debating whether I should go ahead and replace all the electrolytics. Would that be a good idea? However I'd rather deal with the problem directly and not replace parts unnecessarily.
In summary, I'm hopeful someone has seen this issue before and can advise me what steps to take.
A wiring diagram is attached. I got if off of this form (thank you very much). It looks correct for my KB100.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
The problem is the amp sounds a little fuzzy when notes are played. I'm a keyboard player. I use a Yamaha P-85 keyboard. It sounds great when played through my stereo system. But when I play it through the KB100 it sounds like the signal is passing through a low level fuzz box. In other words, there's some distortion when notes are played. Otherwise the amp is silent (no hum).
When I power up the KB100 is takes a minute or so for the volume to come up and level out. It seems like the fuzziness is less noticeable while the volume is coming up.
I measured the voltages across the power supply filter capacitors. Where the diagram says 43 volts I'm getting 41.8 volts. Where the diagram specifies 15 volts I get around 15.5. The 15 volt supply takes a few minutes to stabilize. When the amp is first switched on it starts around 14.9 volts. The 43 volt supply goes the other way. It starts around 42.5 and settles down to 41.8. The + and - supply voltages are within less than 0.5 volts of each other. The same voltage positions measured on the AC scale are about 0.1 volts on the 43 volt supply and .003 on the 15 volt supply.
I'm not sure I'm connecting my keyboard (Yamaha P85) to the KB100 properly. I'm plugging the P85 headphone output into the KB100 power amp input. This, of course, bypasses the preamp in the KB100, which bypasses the volume/tone controls. I assume this is the correct connection since the P85 headphone output is preamplified already. Also, things don't go well at all when I connect the P85 to the normal KB100 inputs.
I purchased capacitors to replace those in the power supply, but I'm not really sure they need to be replaced. As I said above the voltages seem reasonable, at least to my naive mind.
I also purchased some op-amps (4558). I replaced U1 and U7 just because it's easy to do. The high frequency notes seem a little brighter but the fuzziness is still there.
Since the amp is old (vintage 1980's?) I'm debating whether I should go ahead and replace all the electrolytics. Would that be a good idea? However I'd rather deal with the problem directly and not replace parts unnecessarily.
In summary, I'm hopeful someone has seen this issue before and can advise me what steps to take.
A wiring diagram is attached. I got if off of this form (thank you very much). It looks correct for my KB100.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
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