I am working on my Princeton Reverb Clone, built from a Weber kit. While playing the amp it went dead and I found the fuse had blown. I replaced the fuse and plugged the amp in to a light bulb limiter. The bulb glowed brightly. I removed the chassis and ran a series of tests. The transformer has the primary windings and 5 secondary windings: 1) a 5V secondary for the rectifier tube filament; 2) a 6.3V secondary for the other tube filaments; 3) a 540V secondary (which is the one in use); 4) an unused 680V secondary; and 5) a 45V secondary for the bias circuit. Voltage tests were conducted with the amp connected through the light bulb limiter. I discovered the following:
Voltage:
There is no voltage output on any of the secondary windings
Resistance between the leads of each secondary:
Primary = 2.9 ohms
6.3V Secondary = 0.4 ohms
5V Secondary = 0.4 ohms
540V Secondary =13.8 ohms
680V Secondary = 14.0 ohms
Resistance between windings:
6.3V Secondary to 540V Secondary = 32 ohms
6.3V Secondary to 680V Secondary =32 ohms
6.3V Secondary to 5V Secondary = infinite
6.3V Secondary to 45V bias tap = 9.2
Do these readings indicate a short between the windings and a bad power transformer? Are there other tests I should conduct?
Thanks
John
Voltage:
There is no voltage output on any of the secondary windings
Resistance between the leads of each secondary:
Primary = 2.9 ohms
6.3V Secondary = 0.4 ohms
5V Secondary = 0.4 ohms
540V Secondary =13.8 ohms
680V Secondary = 14.0 ohms
Resistance between windings:
6.3V Secondary to 540V Secondary = 32 ohms
6.3V Secondary to 680V Secondary =32 ohms
6.3V Secondary to 5V Secondary = infinite
6.3V Secondary to 45V bias tap = 9.2
Do these readings indicate a short between the windings and a bad power transformer? Are there other tests I should conduct?
Thanks
John
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