As often happens....Ampeg SVT-CL's seem to converge on my shop at the same time. Always welcome for the work..usually know what to expect, sometimes dread what may evolve in the hardware realm. So far, so good on this one. New client amp. Got the preamp and power amp chassis removed from the cabinet without any issues. Even got the hold-down clamps removed while marking/storing the power tubes in sequence without having those 2mm hex drive truss head screws strip on me, or lock up from loctite applied on the threads to really make for an entertaining session. I had recently obtained new 3.5mm and #6-32 Truss Head screws, Philips drive, to replace the original problematic Ampeg hardware. This amp had the #6-32 variety, and got them out without a fight....but replacing them for more reliable low-profile screws none the less.
Got the preamp pulled apart to have a look at the PCB and see if this had the traditional panel mount control's solder terminals full of fractures. YUP....big time. Good.....I was looking for another set of photos to illustrate the most common cause of SVT misbehavior....mechanical design flaw, enhanced by the sheer weight/mass of huge heavy power & output xfmrs shaking the amp apart over time during transport. De-soldering then re-soldering each pot to restore solid connection cures that. Long term.....the pot terminals are used for the mechanical support of the front side of the PCB, so....these WILL fracture again in it's lifetime. To insure shops stay in business...ALWAYS manufacture without using mechanical support brackets.....solder is good enough. Glad Detroit didn't adopt that principal! Though Mitisibushi did on their automatic transmission control assembly mounted to the firewall underneath the dashboard. What a PITA to deal with.
It wasn't clear in these last two photos that there were fractures on the two 2-pin headers for the AC Input and DC output of the heater supply, and the rectified/filtered output that runs the relay on the AC mains/Relay board. Those 0.062 square terminals are a common source of fractures on this board, as well as on the main power amp PCB. I haven't gotten onto that one yet. The tall electrolytic filter cap was poorly mounted, cattywampus to the PCB, so rather than fix it, liberal amount of RTV was gooped onto it. Solder joint on the elevated side was already fracturing, so desoldered, removed the part, got the RTV removed, then applied a thin layer of fresh RTV onto the rim and reseated the cap, folded the leads over and soldered into place, now mechanically stable. The input jacks on this board were actually ok....rare occurrence as those are usually the first to fracture and cause grief. Resoldered the pot-side terminals only. The 5-pin I/O power supply header also had fractures....as is typical on this PCB.
More to come....the adventures moved on into the power amp chassis.
Got the preamp pulled apart to have a look at the PCB and see if this had the traditional panel mount control's solder terminals full of fractures. YUP....big time. Good.....I was looking for another set of photos to illustrate the most common cause of SVT misbehavior....mechanical design flaw, enhanced by the sheer weight/mass of huge heavy power & output xfmrs shaking the amp apart over time during transport. De-soldering then re-soldering each pot to restore solid connection cures that. Long term.....the pot terminals are used for the mechanical support of the front side of the PCB, so....these WILL fracture again in it's lifetime. To insure shops stay in business...ALWAYS manufacture without using mechanical support brackets.....solder is good enough. Glad Detroit didn't adopt that principal! Though Mitisibushi did on their automatic transmission control assembly mounted to the firewall underneath the dashboard. What a PITA to deal with.
It wasn't clear in these last two photos that there were fractures on the two 2-pin headers for the AC Input and DC output of the heater supply, and the rectified/filtered output that runs the relay on the AC mains/Relay board. Those 0.062 square terminals are a common source of fractures on this board, as well as on the main power amp PCB. I haven't gotten onto that one yet. The tall electrolytic filter cap was poorly mounted, cattywampus to the PCB, so rather than fix it, liberal amount of RTV was gooped onto it. Solder joint on the elevated side was already fracturing, so desoldered, removed the part, got the RTV removed, then applied a thin layer of fresh RTV onto the rim and reseated the cap, folded the leads over and soldered into place, now mechanically stable. The input jacks on this board were actually ok....rare occurrence as those are usually the first to fracture and cause grief. Resoldered the pot-side terminals only. The 5-pin I/O power supply header also had fractures....as is typical on this PCB.
More to come....the adventures moved on into the power amp chassis.
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