I am working on a Carvin X60 that the owner asked for new input jacks and basic pot cleaning. Upon getting the amp on the bench, I first tried out both inputs and was able to get sound. The jacks felt solid. I have a call to find out why the input jacks were requested to be replaced.
hen I turned off the amp and began removing the tubes before removing the chassis. One of the power tubes was cold to the touch. I turned off the lights and turned the amp back on to standby. I could see only one of the two power tube filaments lighting up and getting warm. I powered down, swapped power tube locations and turned it back on to standby. The lack of filament followed the tube. Apparently this has been running on a single power tube since one is definitely a goner.
I confirmed the tube was bad by not getting a resistance across pins 2-7 as well as put the pair on my tube tester. I also tested the preamp tubes on its tester and they are about shot as well. Looks like a retube is in order.
I pulled the chassis and did some preliminary visual checks. R132 was burned up and unreadable. From the schematic, it feeds the +15V to the opamps and is a 22ohm 1/2W resistor, while R133 is also 22ohm 1/2W and feeding -15V. I replaced R132 with a 22 ohm 1/2w resistor (per the attached schematic) and put it on standby. I've got -14.5V for the 15V rail, but my positive rail is down around 13.3V. Subsequent versions lowered the value to 10ohm, I'm guessing to allow for more higher loading of the 15V rail.
After replacing the resistor and while on standby, I checked all of the opamps for any shorted outputs or rails and did not find any problems with any of the opamps. None felt like they were getting hot to the touch when the amp was on for a few minutes.
I then grabbed new preamp tubes and a new matched pair of power tubes and put them in (with my bias probes installed). I powered on with a speaker, and noticed that one side of the power tubes was pulling a lot more mA that the other side did. I swapped tube locations and noticed the same side running hot. I powered off, pulled the tubes, then measured the resistance of each leg of the OT. The blue side is reading 91 ohms while the brown is reading 82 ohms. The brown leg side is the one that's running hotter.
Would running a single side power tube (because the other tube wasn't operating) cause damage to the OT? What is a good way to test this transformer to make sure it isn't damaged?
hen I turned off the amp and began removing the tubes before removing the chassis. One of the power tubes was cold to the touch. I turned off the lights and turned the amp back on to standby. I could see only one of the two power tube filaments lighting up and getting warm. I powered down, swapped power tube locations and turned it back on to standby. The lack of filament followed the tube. Apparently this has been running on a single power tube since one is definitely a goner.
I confirmed the tube was bad by not getting a resistance across pins 2-7 as well as put the pair on my tube tester. I also tested the preamp tubes on its tester and they are about shot as well. Looks like a retube is in order.
I pulled the chassis and did some preliminary visual checks. R132 was burned up and unreadable. From the schematic, it feeds the +15V to the opamps and is a 22ohm 1/2W resistor, while R133 is also 22ohm 1/2W and feeding -15V. I replaced R132 with a 22 ohm 1/2w resistor (per the attached schematic) and put it on standby. I've got -14.5V for the 15V rail, but my positive rail is down around 13.3V. Subsequent versions lowered the value to 10ohm, I'm guessing to allow for more higher loading of the 15V rail.
After replacing the resistor and while on standby, I checked all of the opamps for any shorted outputs or rails and did not find any problems with any of the opamps. None felt like they were getting hot to the touch when the amp was on for a few minutes.
I then grabbed new preamp tubes and a new matched pair of power tubes and put them in (with my bias probes installed). I powered on with a speaker, and noticed that one side of the power tubes was pulling a lot more mA that the other side did. I swapped tube locations and noticed the same side running hot. I powered off, pulled the tubes, then measured the resistance of each leg of the OT. The blue side is reading 91 ohms while the brown is reading 82 ohms. The brown leg side is the one that's running hotter.
Would running a single side power tube (because the other tube wasn't operating) cause damage to the OT? What is a good way to test this transformer to make sure it isn't damaged?
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