In tracking down the cause of loud hum in a Peavey 6505 Guitar Head, I first found the input tube V1 appeared to be the culprit, having sequentially gone thru all five tubes, from Driver tube on back to the front end. But, then thinking I had found the cause, when I put the chassis back into the cabinet and powered it up again to check (was sounding tame still on the test stand), it was now humming loudly when I dialed the Rhythm Ch Pre-Gain control up, with the Post-Gain control turned up full CW. I removed it and returned the chassis upside down onto my test stand, and, tapping on the power tubes, I discovered the age-old problem of solder joint fractures on their PCB assy. Discharged the supplies, then de-soldered and re-soldered the plate, screen, cathode & grid terminals of the four tubes. The heater connections looked ok. Powered back up, then, with speaker attached, I went thru both channels' Post Gain controls fully CW, and turning up the Lead Ch Pre-Gain control, when I got my hand near the upper half power tubes, sensitivity to the presence of my hand next to the outside tube got it to feeding back. Rubbing my finger on the top of either tube on the upper half of the output stage sent the amp into squealling, while doing the same on the lower half power tubes, it decreased the sensitivity to touch/hand presence nearby.
I know there's so bloody much overeall gain in this amp from all of the cascaded gain stages, but this is the first time I had found this apparent capacitance-coupling to my hand next to the power tubes, let alone rubbing on them having such an effect. The tubes weren't yet so hot that I couldn't touch them.
I pulled this set of Ruby matched 6L6GC tubes, and installed a new set of J/J 6L6GC matched tubes. Same problem. So, it wasn't the power tubes per se. I began removing the J/J tubes, and upon removing the last Ruby tube from the box that contained the J/J tubes, that last tube came out with the upper half of the glass bottle broken off! So much for restoring the original tubes.
I then went back thru the preamp tubes, starting with swapping out the driver tube, then the preceeding stages, with no change in this behavior, and left them as I had before, just changing out V1 at the start of this task.
I didn't have Peavey's exact 6505 Schematic...thought I had a copy, but might be in my computer down the street, currently inaccessible due to the building rented out to a client. I was working off of an EVH/Peavey 5150, which mechanically did appear like the 6505 I had on the bench.
Has anyone come across this odd characteristic, being extremely sensitive to proximity to the final tubes in the gain stage? The upper tubes proximity would screech, while the lower half tubes would attenuate, not having any high end sensitivity like the upper half does.
Peavey_5150_(6505)_(EVH_120,_2-92)_Schematics.pdf
I know there's so bloody much overeall gain in this amp from all of the cascaded gain stages, but this is the first time I had found this apparent capacitance-coupling to my hand next to the power tubes, let alone rubbing on them having such an effect. The tubes weren't yet so hot that I couldn't touch them.
I pulled this set of Ruby matched 6L6GC tubes, and installed a new set of J/J 6L6GC matched tubes. Same problem. So, it wasn't the power tubes per se. I began removing the J/J tubes, and upon removing the last Ruby tube from the box that contained the J/J tubes, that last tube came out with the upper half of the glass bottle broken off! So much for restoring the original tubes.
I then went back thru the preamp tubes, starting with swapping out the driver tube, then the preceeding stages, with no change in this behavior, and left them as I had before, just changing out V1 at the start of this task.
I didn't have Peavey's exact 6505 Schematic...thought I had a copy, but might be in my computer down the street, currently inaccessible due to the building rented out to a client. I was working off of an EVH/Peavey 5150, which mechanically did appear like the 6505 I had on the bench.
Has anyone come across this odd characteristic, being extremely sensitive to proximity to the final tubes in the gain stage? The upper tubes proximity would screech, while the lower half tubes would attenuate, not having any high end sensitivity like the upper half does.
Peavey_5150_(6505)_(EVH_120,_2-92)_Schematics.pdf
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