Hiya all,
Just a question to the experts on here (of which I am not one):
I had a DSL 100watt head a friend left in for me to look at. It was completely dead (he said). When powered up however I noticed that V5 wasn't lighting up but the other 3 tubes (power section) looked fine - pre amp tubes didn't look like they had much life either. Anyway, I did the usual with these amps and re-soldered everything in sight and then I noticed that F1 was blown (heater supply to V5, T6.3 Amp). I replaced F1 and put the amp back together and up she came fine. I checked the bias on the power tubes and it was reading 120+ mV on each side! In fact both pots were screwed as far as they could be. I pulled this down to about 78mV per side and the amp looks to be ok since. I suspect someone was fiddling with the bias pots in some vain attempt to change the amps performance without actually knowing what the consequences were. My questions are (1) Would the increased bias make the tubes heat more than they should cause they seemed very hot to me and no so hot now? (2) Could excess bias pop the F1 fuse or is there possibly something else wrong that will come back and bite? (3) Would the excess bias have damaged the tube life of the power tubes - apparently these were only replaced recently. (4) Finally, the power tubes had some kind of fancy looking springloaded retainer/heatsink clips on them. Never seen these before, has anyone else? what's the purpose and why do they not exist on subsequent amps (this was a 1997 model).
Thanks in advance for any opinions.
Just a question to the experts on here (of which I am not one):
I had a DSL 100watt head a friend left in for me to look at. It was completely dead (he said). When powered up however I noticed that V5 wasn't lighting up but the other 3 tubes (power section) looked fine - pre amp tubes didn't look like they had much life either. Anyway, I did the usual with these amps and re-soldered everything in sight and then I noticed that F1 was blown (heater supply to V5, T6.3 Amp). I replaced F1 and put the amp back together and up she came fine. I checked the bias on the power tubes and it was reading 120+ mV on each side! In fact both pots were screwed as far as they could be. I pulled this down to about 78mV per side and the amp looks to be ok since. I suspect someone was fiddling with the bias pots in some vain attempt to change the amps performance without actually knowing what the consequences were. My questions are (1) Would the increased bias make the tubes heat more than they should cause they seemed very hot to me and no so hot now? (2) Could excess bias pop the F1 fuse or is there possibly something else wrong that will come back and bite? (3) Would the excess bias have damaged the tube life of the power tubes - apparently these were only replaced recently. (4) Finally, the power tubes had some kind of fancy looking springloaded retainer/heatsink clips on them. Never seen these before, has anyone else? what's the purpose and why do they not exist on subsequent amps (this was a 1997 model).
Thanks in advance for any opinions.
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