Hi all,
I'm registered here cause I liked the pickup makers forum (I was entertaining thoughts of doing such a thing over the summer but my ambition exceeded my budget), and I thought perhaps you amp guys might be able to help me out with something.
I've got an older Peavey 5150 that's got more than a few years on the road under its belt. I bought it about 2 years ago and it had just been retubed and bias-modded. Right around that time, the band I was in broke up and I haven't used the amp a whole lot until recently when I started another group heavy enough to require such amplification.
Anyway, the amp is probably due for new tubes, but I've got a pair of problems I'm wondering if I should address before I blow a hundred bucks on a new set of tubes--
1.) I fired the amp up at practice the other day and my bass player immediately noticed and mentioned that it sounds very little like a 5150. It doesn't have that trademark "huge" sound of the 5150, though it does have all the gritty distortion. There is no irritating hum or buzz, but the tone is exceptionally thin and unsatisfying. Is this simply the tubes being old? Could it be a poorly adjusted bias? How can I adjust this? Is there an easy way to locate the pot? What should i NOT touch if I open the amp up?
2.) During periods of extended use at ANY volume, the amp will suddenly lose roughly 75% of its volume, with no obvious external stimulous. The tubes are glowing as they should, and if I leave it alone, it is sometimes better after a couple of hours. Or days. Is this a tube issue or something more insidious?
If this is something simple, I'll probably do it myself. If not, fortunately, there's a really good amp guy in town, but he's expensive and I'm poor.
Disclaimer-
I'm a guitar guy. You've gotta explain slowly
Thanks!!!
I'm registered here cause I liked the pickup makers forum (I was entertaining thoughts of doing such a thing over the summer but my ambition exceeded my budget), and I thought perhaps you amp guys might be able to help me out with something.
I've got an older Peavey 5150 that's got more than a few years on the road under its belt. I bought it about 2 years ago and it had just been retubed and bias-modded. Right around that time, the band I was in broke up and I haven't used the amp a whole lot until recently when I started another group heavy enough to require such amplification.
Anyway, the amp is probably due for new tubes, but I've got a pair of problems I'm wondering if I should address before I blow a hundred bucks on a new set of tubes--
1.) I fired the amp up at practice the other day and my bass player immediately noticed and mentioned that it sounds very little like a 5150. It doesn't have that trademark "huge" sound of the 5150, though it does have all the gritty distortion. There is no irritating hum or buzz, but the tone is exceptionally thin and unsatisfying. Is this simply the tubes being old? Could it be a poorly adjusted bias? How can I adjust this? Is there an easy way to locate the pot? What should i NOT touch if I open the amp up?
2.) During periods of extended use at ANY volume, the amp will suddenly lose roughly 75% of its volume, with no obvious external stimulous. The tubes are glowing as they should, and if I leave it alone, it is sometimes better after a couple of hours. Or days. Is this a tube issue or something more insidious?
If this is something simple, I'll probably do it myself. If not, fortunately, there's a really good amp guy in town, but he's expensive and I'm poor.
Disclaimer-
I'm a guitar guy. You've gotta explain slowly
Thanks!!!
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