I have a guitar amplifier (Crate FXT120, entry-level solid state model from the mid-2000s) that is having a problem. Starting 3-15 minutes after turning it on and starting to play, the sound fades to almost nothing. Here's what I know so far.
- This happens over the course of a few seconds to a minute, with the volume erratically dropping some, coming back, dropping more, etc. until I can't hear it any more.
- It happens on all preamp channels (Clean, overdrive, and "Lead")
- There is never any popping or scratching sound that I would associate with a loose connection / open circuit carrying the signal.
- When fading out, the volume changes quickly but not quite instantaneously. I would guess it typically takes about 0.5 seconds to go from one volume level to another.
- The amp has an input jack labeled "Insert", which is intended for playing along with backing tracks. I believe it skips the preamp and goes straight to the power amp but I don't actually know that for sure. My problem does NOT occur with the "Insert" input; it keeps amplifying just the same while the volume on the main input drops.
- I have reflowed the solder on the input jack pins and thoroughly cleaned the input jack. This had no effect.
- When initially powered on it works fine. There is no excessive 60/120Hz hum and volume is normal.
- LEDs showing the selected channel stay on and do not fade as the volume fades.
- Looking at the PCB, there don't appear to be any bad solder joints or anything visibly burnt.
- If I tilt the cab back and forth I can hear something moving around. Is there a tilt shutoff switch like on space heaters?
- It's not the power amp or anything downstream of it (output transformer, speakers, etc). If this were the case, the "Insert" input would also be affected.
- It's not a loose connection in the signal path. I have experienced bad headphone cords and instrument cables and this is nothing like that.
- It's not filter capacitors. There's no hum from the power supply ripple.
- The problem is probably triggered by heat.
- Could it be the power transformer? How would I test that?
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