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  • Power Tube Arcing

    First time post.

    I have a Traynor Studio Mate (aka Guitar Mate) that is giving me trouble. I have worked on this amp in the past replacing filter caps and tubes with success.

    Lately however it has taken to blowing the circuit breaker after flipping the stand-by switch. There was a slight burning odor afterwards. I pulled the chassis and observed some evidence of arcing at both power tube sockets. It seems that pin 7 (wired to the OT) on both is arcing to ground.

    Everything else seemed okay (visually). I was hoping to get a few suggestions as to where to begin. After searching the forum for similar problems I have a few ideas:

    1. Pull the power tubes and see if it still blows.

    2. Check the stand-by switch (bad?).

    3. Check and or replace the power tube sockets (arcing, cracked).

    4. Test the OT (not sure exactly how to measure for that).

    I do have a nice Fluke DMM and soldering station to help me along.

    Here is a link to the basic schematic for this amp if that helps.

    http://www.lynx.bc.ca/~jc/73_JoePiazza_YGM34.gif

    I am working out how to host pictures with my ISP so I should be able to attach pictures or the actual schematic that came attached inside the combo cabinet.

    Thanks.

  • #2
    Arcing at the power tube sockets points to high flyback voltages from the OT, often the result of mismatched load with the load substantially higher than spec'd. Are you plugging into the correct speaker impedance? An open circuit between the OT and the speaker could also cause this, make sure your speaker connections are tight, speaker cable/plug/jack connections are tight and you have continuity between the OT and the speaker.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by hasserl View Post
      Arcing at the power tube sockets points to high flyback voltages from the OT, often the result of mismatched load with the load substantially higher than spec'd. Are you plugging into the correct speaker impedance? An open circuit between the OT and the speaker could also cause this, make sure your speaker connections are tight, speaker cable/plug/jack connections are tight and you have continuity between the OT and the speaker.
      Thanks for the reply. Traynor has a somewhat funky speaker cable running from the chassis to the cabinet speakers, its rather weak and uses a RCA style connection. I could test it by connecting to another external speaker and to see if it still blows the breaker.

      How would I check for continuity between the OT and speaker?

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Sleet View Post
        Thanks for the reply. Traynor has a somewhat funky speaker cable running from the chassis to the cabinet speakers, its rather weak and uses a RCA style connection. I could test it by connecting to another external speaker and to see if it still blows the breaker.

        How would I check for continuity between the OT and speaker?
        For what its worth, I have found over the years that once a tube socket arcs over, it is VERY VERY hard to fix the socket so it won't do that again.
        I just replace them at once, saving the the brain damage and time/energy to do it again and again.
        Bruce

        Mission Amps
        Denver, CO. 80022
        www.missionamps.com
        303-955-2412

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Bruce / Mission Amps View Post
          For what its worth, I have found over the years that once a tube socket arcs over, it is VERY VERY hard to fix the socket so it won't do that again.
          I just replace them at once, saving the the brain damage and time/energy to do it again and again.
          I am considering replacing them. Should I look for any particular kind of replacements? Some people are big on the older no longer in production stuff.

          Come to think of it, I have a few of the white ceramic sockets with "gold" contacts that should work.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Sleet View Post
            I am considering replacing them. Should I look for any particular kind of replacements? Some people are big on the older no longer in production stuff.

            Come to think of it, I have a few of the white ceramic sockets with "gold" contacts that should work.
            Okay, I have replaced the tube sockets and it is still arcing off of pin 7 to the chassis. Should I look at replacing the OT now? If so how would I go about identifying a replacement unit?

            Thanks.

            Comment


            • #7
              The only thing I can think of that would cause the plate lug to arc over to the chassis is if there is no speaker load, the speaker connection is intermittent or the speaker impedance is WAY too high.
              I can't imagine the secondary being internally shorted, creating a radical impedance ratio error, but maybe.

              Check to see if the wires from the OT are connected properly to the socket and or the speaker jacks.
              With respect to the secondary (speaker side), open is the dangerous mode and shorted is just broken but not dangerous.
              Bruce

              Mission Amps
              Denver, CO. 80022
              www.missionamps.com
              303-955-2412

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Bruce / Mission Amps View Post
                The only thing I can think of that would cause the plate lug to arc over to the chassis is if there is no speaker load, the speaker connection is intermittent or the speaker impedance is WAY too high.
                I can't imagine the secondary being internally shorted, creating a radical impedance ratio error, but maybe.

                Check to see if the wires from the OT are connected properly to the socket and or the speaker jacks.
                With respect to the secondary (speaker side), open is the dangerous mode and shorted is just broken but not dangerous.
                Bruce,
                Thanks for the response. Possible cracked or cold solder joints? I will double check my connections again. Is there a method to figure out what kind of replacement OT I would need? If it comes to this.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Sleet View Post
                  First time post.

                  I have a Traynor Studio Mate (aka Guitar Mate) that is giving me trouble. I have worked on this amp in the past replacing filter caps and tubes with success.

                  Lately however it has taken to blowing the circuit breaker after flipping the stand-by switch. There was a slight burning odor afterwards. I pulled the chassis and observed some evidence of arcing at both power tube sockets. It seems that pin 7 (wired to the OT) on both is arcing to ground.

                  Everything else seemed okay (visually). I was hoping to get a few suggestions as to where to begin. After searching the forum for similar problems I have a few ideas:

                  1. Pull the power tubes and see if it still blows.

                  NO

                  2. Check the stand-by switch (bad?).

                  NO

                  3. Check and or replace the power tube sockets (arcing, cracked).

                  YES

                  4. Test the OT (not sure exactly how to measure for that).

                  YES

                  I do have a nice Fluke DMM and soldering station to help me along.

                  Here is a link to the basic schematic for this amp if that helps.

                  http://www.lynx.bc.ca/~jc/73_JoePiazza_YGM34.gif

                  I am working out how to host pictures with my ISP so I should be able to attach pictures or the actual schematic that came attached inside the combo cabinet.

                  Thanks.
                  You MUST replace the burned sockets, there is a carbon track that cannot be cleaned off.
                  This is usually caused by the wrong speaker impedance or a bad output transformer. It can also be caused by a bad speaker. very often this happens when using a shielded guitar cable instead of a two conductor speaker cable- to connect the speakers.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by mykey View Post
                    You MUST replace the burned sockets, there is a carbon track that cannot be cleaned off.
                    This is usually caused by the wrong speaker impedance or a bad output transformer. It can also be caused by a bad speaker. very often this happens when using a shielded guitar cable instead of a two conductor speaker cable- to connect the speakers.
                    Here is an update to my problem:

                    I have received my parts and installed the two new power tube sockets. I fired it up and found the good news:

                    1. Circuit breaker held and no arcing from pin 7 to the chassis.

                    The bad news is that there is no output to the speakers when plugged in with my guitar. Also, when switching from on back to standby there is a loud "pop" heard through the speakers.

                    I did purchase a new set of tubes, but thought I would try plugging with the old tubes first. I am concerned that if the OT is bad, I might damage my new tubes somehow.

                    Is it safe to assume that my OT is blown? I didn't test the resistance on it prior to my repairs.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Sleet View Post
                      Here is an update to my problem:

                      I have received my parts and installed the two new power tube sockets. I fired it up and found the good news:

                      1. Circuit breaker held and no arcing from pin 7 to the chassis.

                      The bad news is that there is no output to the speakers when plugged in with my guitar. Also, when switching from on back to standby there is a loud "pop" heard through the speakers.

                      I did purchase a new set of tubes, but thought I would try plugging with the old tubes first. I am concerned that if the OT is bad, I might damage my new tubes somehow.

                      Is it safe to assume that my OT is blown? I didn't test the resistance on it prior to my repairs.
                      there are a number of things that could be wrong, including that the
                      tube sockets may be rewired incorrectly.
                      the B+ circuit could be malfunctioning
                      the output tranny could be bad
                      but at this point it's better to get it to a shop and have it checked.
                      rather than guess and randomly replace parts.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        OT's are easy to test. Use your meter and make sure the caps are discharged. If you put the meter on DC volts and go from chassis(black lead) and (red lead) to pin 3 and verify low voltage there. Switch the meter to resistance and measure across the two wires going to the OT primaries that are hooked to pin 3 of each tube side. It should be around 70 to 140 ohms. Now locate the B+ wire on the primary of the OT and measure from it to each wire on pin 3 you just measured and it should be half of what you just measured before. If it is your tranny is almost certainly good. I haven't found one yet that passes that test and is bad. If it is bad it will read high resistance or OL on the meter. Also make sure the 250 ohm Cathode resistor is ok and the capacitor. If the cap has black around the positive side it could be bad and cause the amp not to sound.
                        KB

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Amp Kat View Post
                          OT's are easy to test. Use your meter and make sure the caps are discharged. If you put the meter on DC volts and go from chassis(black lead) and (red lead) to pin 3 and verify low voltage there. Switch the meter to resistance and measure across the two wires going to the OT primaries that are hooked to pin 3 of each tube side. It should be around 70 to 140 ohms. Now locate the B+ wire on the primary of the OT and measure from it to each wire on pin 3 you just measured and it should be half of what you just measured before. If it is your tranny is almost certainly good. I haven't found one yet that passes that test and is bad. If it is bad it will read high resistance or OL on the meter. Also make sure the 250 ohm Cathode resistor is ok and the capacitor. If the cap has black around the positive side it could be bad and cause the amp not to sound.
                          Sorry to be dense, but I don't need to unsolder the leads of the OT to check them?

                          Thanks.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Actually you don't. The wires from the primary go to the tube sockets. If you removed the tube, then the wire is connected to nothing. SO it is just as good as disconnected. But even with the tube, the plate of the tube within the tube itself is not connected to anything else. it is just a metal plate that normally waits for electrons to hit it. SO with powr off, the tube is a non-connection as well.
                            Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Amp Kat View Post
                              Use your meter and make sure the caps are discharged.
                              ^^^^^^^ unless you like big sparks, blown meter fuses, and soiled underwear, this is a VERY IMPORTANT STEP. :lol:

                              Comment

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