A new client who lives up in Channel Islands Beach in Ventura County, Southern California brought me his Ampeg SVT-CL amp that's in need of service. I pulled the preamp out while he was here, after fighting with the solidified Garden Hose vinyl sleeving between the Power amp and preamp chassis. Once I got the Preamp PCB removed, I saw and pointed out the traditional solder joint fractures on all of the front panel pots that weren't found two years ago when it was serviced be a local shop. I haven't checked the date codes while I had it apart, but after going thru and restoring all of the solder joint fractures throughout the preamp, power amp, AC mains/Relay and Output PCB assy's, as well as the power tube PCB, and tightened up all of the loose hardware, I then cut away the solidified clear vinyl 'garden hose sleeving Ampeg uses. Took a lot more effort than usual, but got that crap removed, then installed Tech Flex with the harness wiring inside of those two flexible tubes.
I put it back together and powered it up without any power tubes, just to get to a functional state, so I could then go thru the set of power tubes and see what I had to deal there. Five of the six tubes were simlar in plate current...all in the 17-20mA range, while the last tube was almost 25mA. Figures. I managed to get the two halves balanced and averaged near equal, though had to be at a lower plate current than I like due to that one tube running more current.
After installing the hold-down clamps, now fitted with hi temp silicon rubber sleeving, I connected the test speaker and powered back up, after it had warmed up. HORRENDOUS NOISE came from the speaker as I reached for the Standby Switch and shut it down. Tried that a couple more times, same results. Replaced the speaker with the dummy load, powered back up, and then went tapping on the power tubes and chassis, preamp and drive tubes, and seeing the RED Bias LED's lighting up. I didn't get it to go into protect, but, I've only scratched the surface with this one, it seems
I got the amp/preamp onto a road case and rolled it over to the test bench to have a look at this problem coming out of the speaker jacks on the scope/analyzer, and powered it up this afternoon. Still pitching a fit, and I had contacted the client to report my findings. Oh yeah....he's very familiar with that sound, he told me. That's mainly why it's down here. This is the worst one I've encountered with regards to environmental attack on the contacts thruout the amp. So, there's lots of clean-up yet to be done. Every tube yields tapping noise...far more than normal. so that damp salt air over time has crept into the system big-time. I hadn't yet disconnected and cleaned all of the harness terminals, as well as the tube sockets and tube pins, but I guess this will be the next step to see if I can get back to a stable system.
RUST NEVER SLEEPS!
I put it back together and powered it up without any power tubes, just to get to a functional state, so I could then go thru the set of power tubes and see what I had to deal there. Five of the six tubes were simlar in plate current...all in the 17-20mA range, while the last tube was almost 25mA. Figures. I managed to get the two halves balanced and averaged near equal, though had to be at a lower plate current than I like due to that one tube running more current.
After installing the hold-down clamps, now fitted with hi temp silicon rubber sleeving, I connected the test speaker and powered back up, after it had warmed up. HORRENDOUS NOISE came from the speaker as I reached for the Standby Switch and shut it down. Tried that a couple more times, same results. Replaced the speaker with the dummy load, powered back up, and then went tapping on the power tubes and chassis, preamp and drive tubes, and seeing the RED Bias LED's lighting up. I didn't get it to go into protect, but, I've only scratched the surface with this one, it seems
I got the amp/preamp onto a road case and rolled it over to the test bench to have a look at this problem coming out of the speaker jacks on the scope/analyzer, and powered it up this afternoon. Still pitching a fit, and I had contacted the client to report my findings. Oh yeah....he's very familiar with that sound, he told me. That's mainly why it's down here. This is the worst one I've encountered with regards to environmental attack on the contacts thruout the amp. So, there's lots of clean-up yet to be done. Every tube yields tapping noise...far more than normal. so that damp salt air over time has crept into the system big-time. I hadn't yet disconnected and cleaned all of the harness terminals, as well as the tube sockets and tube pins, but I guess this will be the next step to see if I can get back to a stable system.
RUST NEVER SLEEPS!
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