Hello,
I would describe myself as an amp repair hobbyist with some good repair skills. I am constantly challenging myself and learning / reading. I want to try and improve on making sure the amps I work on 100% will not return with other issues. It is maybe the weakest point of mine and the rate at which it happens makes me reticent to step into offering it publicly, and has me considering leaving it to others, as much as I love working on vintage tube amps. For example, I recently worked on a friends 1966 twin. It was blowing fuses due to a bad rectifier tube. I replaced it, checked critical voltages, sent a 1k sine wave through the amp for a good 30 minutes, chopsticked around the amp to look for bad connections. It passed that test with no issue. A week later, I get a call that the pilot light is lighting up but not the tubes. Which wouldn't be possible without there being a bad connection on one of the tube sockets. Maybe it is something I overlooked but I don't think so. It's an issue that did not come up at all while I had the amp.
Anyway, this kind of thing has been a source of stress for me, just not knowing whether I have gone through the amp thoroughly enough. I would like to trust my own work and build trust with people who bring their amps to me. Does anyone else deal with this? Any recommendations for a "checklist" of things to do before returning an amp and guaranteeing no issues come up later? There are no right answers on this topic since every repair is different, obviously. It is likely that I have some serious holes in my knowledge, but I feel though I am educating myself through trusted materials like "art of electronics", merlin blencowe's book and taking online electronics courses after getting into amp repair being completely self taught. I am getting to the point where I feel as though I am not cut out for it, any help or advice is appreciated. Sorry if this is not an appropriate question for this forum but I'm sure other wanna be techs deal with these issues as well. Thank you in advance. I'm sure there are many experienced techs here that have a very low rate of returns that can share what they know.
I would describe myself as an amp repair hobbyist with some good repair skills. I am constantly challenging myself and learning / reading. I want to try and improve on making sure the amps I work on 100% will not return with other issues. It is maybe the weakest point of mine and the rate at which it happens makes me reticent to step into offering it publicly, and has me considering leaving it to others, as much as I love working on vintage tube amps. For example, I recently worked on a friends 1966 twin. It was blowing fuses due to a bad rectifier tube. I replaced it, checked critical voltages, sent a 1k sine wave through the amp for a good 30 minutes, chopsticked around the amp to look for bad connections. It passed that test with no issue. A week later, I get a call that the pilot light is lighting up but not the tubes. Which wouldn't be possible without there being a bad connection on one of the tube sockets. Maybe it is something I overlooked but I don't think so. It's an issue that did not come up at all while I had the amp.
Anyway, this kind of thing has been a source of stress for me, just not knowing whether I have gone through the amp thoroughly enough. I would like to trust my own work and build trust with people who bring their amps to me. Does anyone else deal with this? Any recommendations for a "checklist" of things to do before returning an amp and guaranteeing no issues come up later? There are no right answers on this topic since every repair is different, obviously. It is likely that I have some serious holes in my knowledge, but I feel though I am educating myself through trusted materials like "art of electronics", merlin blencowe's book and taking online electronics courses after getting into amp repair being completely self taught. I am getting to the point where I feel as though I am not cut out for it, any help or advice is appreciated. Sorry if this is not an appropriate question for this forum but I'm sure other wanna be techs deal with these issues as well. Thank you in advance. I'm sure there are many experienced techs here that have a very low rate of returns that can share what they know.
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