Hi all,
I'm doing some work on a friends Bell Sound Systems Pacemaker PM33 PA head that he wants to use for guitar. It has a major oscillation problem and seems very unstable.
It has fresh sprague filter caps and coupling caps, virtually every resistor has been been replaced as nearly all were out of spec. (i'm using 2 good fluke meters that i know are fine). Every tube - 6SC7, 6AV6, 12AX7, 6L6GC, 6L6GC, 5U4GB are known good replacement tubes. The inputs now use shielded cable and the grids of V1 and the two 6L6's now have grid stopper resistors right on the pins. I've been through every solder joint, every ground point and they all seem fine. Voltages throughout are roughly 10% higher than on the schematic, every plate and grid are OK.
The oscillation seems better with the feedback loop removed but that then gives too much drive and some major ghost notes on the top strings...it's like having a slapback echo pedal on! (not a bad thing but he doesn't want to use it for rockabilly!). As can be expected with these things it's easier to trigger the oscillation with the bass or treble boosted on the 5-way tone selector switch.
Here's a link for the schematic:
http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/i...3schematic.jpg
Here's a short video (sorry, i didn't realise that the video was shot on it's side so you'll need to tilt you head to the left!).
http://s263.photobucket.com/albums/i...keronscope.flv
With a 400hz sinewave through the amp which is connected to an 8ohm dummy load, I get a fairly good sine wave at low volumes which squares off quite quickly as i increase the volume then with the volume at about 3/4 the oscillation starts. The amplitude of the wave grows then falls to a nearly flat line then back to a pretty troubled looking square wave about every 1-2 seconds.
When this happens there's about a 40-50vdc swing on the plates of the OP tubes. The oscillation is in every stage of the amp but gets larger as you go towards the OP.
I've checked for AC on every filter and coupling cap, there's less than 80-100mv on the two 20uf/450v caps, ditto for the 100uf/50v on the cathodes of the 6L6's, but there's around 4vAC on the 40uf/475uf main filter cap....does that sound a bit high???
Ideally I'd like to be able to re-connect the feedback loop as it's a bit wild without it but as it's so unstable I can't.
I'm running out of ideas now and really need some other input, what should I look at next? Hope you can help.
Many thanks in advance
I'm doing some work on a friends Bell Sound Systems Pacemaker PM33 PA head that he wants to use for guitar. It has a major oscillation problem and seems very unstable.
It has fresh sprague filter caps and coupling caps, virtually every resistor has been been replaced as nearly all were out of spec. (i'm using 2 good fluke meters that i know are fine). Every tube - 6SC7, 6AV6, 12AX7, 6L6GC, 6L6GC, 5U4GB are known good replacement tubes. The inputs now use shielded cable and the grids of V1 and the two 6L6's now have grid stopper resistors right on the pins. I've been through every solder joint, every ground point and they all seem fine. Voltages throughout are roughly 10% higher than on the schematic, every plate and grid are OK.
The oscillation seems better with the feedback loop removed but that then gives too much drive and some major ghost notes on the top strings...it's like having a slapback echo pedal on! (not a bad thing but he doesn't want to use it for rockabilly!). As can be expected with these things it's easier to trigger the oscillation with the bass or treble boosted on the 5-way tone selector switch.
Here's a link for the schematic:
http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/i...3schematic.jpg
Here's a short video (sorry, i didn't realise that the video was shot on it's side so you'll need to tilt you head to the left!).
http://s263.photobucket.com/albums/i...keronscope.flv
With a 400hz sinewave through the amp which is connected to an 8ohm dummy load, I get a fairly good sine wave at low volumes which squares off quite quickly as i increase the volume then with the volume at about 3/4 the oscillation starts. The amplitude of the wave grows then falls to a nearly flat line then back to a pretty troubled looking square wave about every 1-2 seconds.
When this happens there's about a 40-50vdc swing on the plates of the OP tubes. The oscillation is in every stage of the amp but gets larger as you go towards the OP.
I've checked for AC on every filter and coupling cap, there's less than 80-100mv on the two 20uf/450v caps, ditto for the 100uf/50v on the cathodes of the 6L6's, but there's around 4vAC on the 40uf/475uf main filter cap....does that sound a bit high???
Ideally I'd like to be able to re-connect the feedback loop as it's a bit wild without it but as it's so unstable I can't.
I'm running out of ideas now and really need some other input, what should I look at next? Hope you can help.
Many thanks in advance
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