Hi All,
I am new to this forum so hello to you all.
I have a Marshall 1959SLP 35th anniversary re-issue. I have had a minor problem recently with no sound coming out of the amp when I flicked on the standby switch, which was solved by flicking the power switch off and on quickly and it worked fine for a few hours until it would cut out again.
I had a look around a few sites and decided that it was best to start with replacing the valves and see what would happen. I put the new valves in and I could only get the amp to work intermittently, cutting in and out all of the time. When I get a sound out of it I have to be really careful not to whack the strings, as this causes the amp to cut out again. I put the old valves back in and the problem stayed.
I tested the valve seat voltages and some of them seem far from what was indicated on the Marshall 100w voltage chart (although this chart may be the wrong one for the SLP) I was getting 380Vdc at the grid of valve 2 when the chart said 170Vdc.
I have been through all of the resistors in turn and tested their resistance to the values marked on them and came up with some supprising results. The 4 resistors that couple the 4 guitar inputs to the 2 grids of valve 1 were half of their marked values 34k (marked value 68k).
Could using effects infront of the guitar input cause this? I use an ebow and the output of this screams into the amp!
I have been testing the amp with a clean guitar signal straight in, all of the leads and connections are fine. It is definatley an amp problem!
I pray on your expert knowlege to give me some more advice on whether these results would cause the problems above, or if you have any further suggestions I would love to hear them.
Thanks for reading!
Pete.
I am new to this forum so hello to you all.
I have a Marshall 1959SLP 35th anniversary re-issue. I have had a minor problem recently with no sound coming out of the amp when I flicked on the standby switch, which was solved by flicking the power switch off and on quickly and it worked fine for a few hours until it would cut out again.
I had a look around a few sites and decided that it was best to start with replacing the valves and see what would happen. I put the new valves in and I could only get the amp to work intermittently, cutting in and out all of the time. When I get a sound out of it I have to be really careful not to whack the strings, as this causes the amp to cut out again. I put the old valves back in and the problem stayed.
I tested the valve seat voltages and some of them seem far from what was indicated on the Marshall 100w voltage chart (although this chart may be the wrong one for the SLP) I was getting 380Vdc at the grid of valve 2 when the chart said 170Vdc.
I have been through all of the resistors in turn and tested their resistance to the values marked on them and came up with some supprising results. The 4 resistors that couple the 4 guitar inputs to the 2 grids of valve 1 were half of their marked values 34k (marked value 68k).
Could using effects infront of the guitar input cause this? I use an ebow and the output of this screams into the amp!
I have been testing the amp with a clean guitar signal straight in, all of the leads and connections are fine. It is definatley an amp problem!
I pray on your expert knowlege to give me some more advice on whether these results would cause the problems above, or if you have any further suggestions I would love to hear them.
Thanks for reading!
Pete.
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