I am working on an Ampeg Reverb Rocket that has an annoying hum. I have changed the output tubes, phase inverter, electrolytics, OT, any out of spec resisitors and coupling caps and bypass caps. The hum goes away only if I ground pin2 of v4 or pull v4. I lifted the lead to pin2 and injected a signal from an MP3 player into pin2 and had no hum from the output stage. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
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ll I want for Christmas is no more hum!
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If pulling any preamp tubes makes no difference then the hum is probably due to a grounding or power supply fault."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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If grounding the PI grid makes the hum disappear, but disconnecting the coupling cap to PI at V3 end does not, then I would guess that wire is picking it up somewhere.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Support for Fender, Laney, Marshall, Mesa, VOX and many more. https://jonsnell.co.uk
If you can't fix it, I probably can.
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Look just before V4; V3 pin six is the mixed output to the Phase Splitter.
The Phase Splitter we have discovered is not the issue, so move back to the previous section;
Link V3 pin 7 to ground (Green link) and test.; see where where we are going with this ...
Place a link as shown between pin 7 and ground on V3 (Green link). Does the hum stop, if it does, remove the link and go to the next part.
Link V1 pin 10 to ground Red link. Power off first!
If the hum doesn't stop; remove the Red link and Link V1 pin 9 to ground (Blue link).
Move back towards the input until the hum stops. The last part you linked out, is where the issue is.
V1 pin 3 is acting as a diode clamp for the tremelo, you cannot link out pin 3 to ground as it will upset your mixer/driver stage bias.
I know it seems good to take a stab in the dark but that is not good fault finding.Last edited by Jon Snell; 12-22-2021, 07:39 AM.Support for Fender, Laney, Marshall, Mesa, VOX and many more. https://jonsnell.co.uk
If you can't fix it, I probably can.
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Support for Fender, Laney, Marshall, Mesa, VOX and many more. https://jonsnell.co.uk
If you can't fix it, I probably can.
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Originally posted by words453 View PostI celebrated too soon, the hum is back
"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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I tacked in a new .001 capacitor in and the hum was gone. Then I trimmed the leads and soldered everything properly and the hum was back. I guess it’s possible that one of the components wasn’t making good contact at the junction. If I lift the 0.1 capacitor from the junction with v3 pin6, the.001 cap and the 47k plate resistor, the hum goes away. If I leave the cap in place and lift any other component from that junction, I get hum. I have replaced both the 0.1 and .001 caps and the 47k resistor. Any suggestions?
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