Hello! I have an Acoustic Control Corp. 370 bass amp that I have been meaning to repair for several years. The last few times I played through it (which has been a while), it was sounding just generally weaker and increasingly noisy. It never quit working — I just decided to retire it for a while. I followed a few posts here and elsewhere regarding this amp, and I suppose that’s why I’ve put off repairing it — it seemed that several techs were encountering more or less the same problem, namely that of having an entire new set of output transistors go up in smoke while bringing the repaired amp’s voltage up on a variac. From what I was able to gather, it seemed that the new devices (2N3055 power transistors, or current equivalents) were more efficient to the point of making this particular amp circuit unstable. Some techs even went so far as to say that completely modifying the amp’s topology was the only way to make it stable. Can anyone out there confirm or deny that this is the case with this amp?
As probably anyone knows who is reading this post, the Acoustic 370 is a classic bass amp — I would hate to think that at this point the amp is un-repairable. I have been working on and building tube guitar amps for 20+ years, but I have been doing so as a musician and a hobbyist — I am not an electrical engineer. This particular amp I find a little intimidating.
I have ordered a set of output transistors, as well as the transistors to replace the driver and bias ones. I have also sourced and ordered all the electrolytic caps I will need to do a complete cap job.
All I need is a little advice and encouragement that the amp will not just blow up after doing all this repair work...
Thanks!
As probably anyone knows who is reading this post, the Acoustic 370 is a classic bass amp — I would hate to think that at this point the amp is un-repairable. I have been working on and building tube guitar amps for 20+ years, but I have been doing so as a musician and a hobbyist — I am not an electrical engineer. This particular amp I find a little intimidating.
I have ordered a set of output transistors, as well as the transistors to replace the driver and bias ones. I have also sourced and ordered all the electrolytic caps I will need to do a complete cap job.
All I need is a little advice and encouragement that the amp will not just blow up after doing all this repair work...
Thanks!
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