I built a VJr head about a year ago - completely gutted it and used a turret board kit with a Hammond 125ESE. It sounded great with the Weber 8" alnico speaker I bought to go with it.
I also have a Fender DRII that I've been playing recently, and when I went back to the VJr, it sounded thin, flabby, and harsh in comparison. I thought perhaps it was the 8" speaker that made such a difference in tone, but when I hooked the 8" up to the DRII, it sounded fantastic. So I hooked up the VJr to the Celestion G12H in the DRII cab and it sounded just as thin, flabby and harsh as thru the 8".
So I broke the VJr open and started testing components and voltages and came up with a few odd readings. I used a Fluke 179 DMM to test the resistors and capacitors. All the resistors tested close to stated values with the exception of R1/1M which actually tests 9.82k (yes, it's marked Brn-Blk-Grn, odd it would test 10k), and R16 and 17 which are marked as 100R but actually measure 50R.
Measuring the caps yielded wild variations from the marked values, so I'm wondering if a DMM can be used to reliably measure capacitance. C1,C2(coupling caps)/.0022uf gave no reading at all, but did measure 350k ohms - so I think they must be blown. C3, C4(cathode caps)/22uf both read 115uf. C5/1000uf tested at 7000uf(!?). Filter cap C6/47uf tested at 80uf, and C11/0.1uf tested at 25uf.
Is it possible the cap values are that far off, or is the meter unable to accurately test the caps?
I also have a Fender DRII that I've been playing recently, and when I went back to the VJr, it sounded thin, flabby, and harsh in comparison. I thought perhaps it was the 8" speaker that made such a difference in tone, but when I hooked the 8" up to the DRII, it sounded fantastic. So I hooked up the VJr to the Celestion G12H in the DRII cab and it sounded just as thin, flabby and harsh as thru the 8".
So I broke the VJr open and started testing components and voltages and came up with a few odd readings. I used a Fluke 179 DMM to test the resistors and capacitors. All the resistors tested close to stated values with the exception of R1/1M which actually tests 9.82k (yes, it's marked Brn-Blk-Grn, odd it would test 10k), and R16 and 17 which are marked as 100R but actually measure 50R.
Measuring the caps yielded wild variations from the marked values, so I'm wondering if a DMM can be used to reliably measure capacitance. C1,C2(coupling caps)/.0022uf gave no reading at all, but did measure 350k ohms - so I think they must be blown. C3, C4(cathode caps)/22uf both read 115uf. C5/1000uf tested at 7000uf(!?). Filter cap C6/47uf tested at 80uf, and C11/0.1uf tested at 25uf.
Is it possible the cap values are that far off, or is the meter unable to accurately test the caps?
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