Hello all, I have acquired a Triumph PAG 60 and it looks like it was dropped at some point and the speaker outputs took the brunt of the damage... The body was bent, and I've bent it back pretty close to where it should be. There's a solder joint that broke in between the main and aux speaker output that needs to be repaired. I circled it in red in the photo. While I am in there, there's also a orange wire that I've circled that comes from the smaller of the two transformers. It doesn't look very well done and I'm curious if that is from peavey or someone else later on down the road. It looks as if the two jacks for the speaker outs were replaced at some point. Lastly, Is this amp self-biasing? I cannot find any bias points or adjustment pots. I've looked for schematics but can only find non PAG triumph. Thank you and have a great day.
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Peavey Triumph PAG 60 repair questions
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I have a schematic for the PAG 120. I am guessing it is very close to the 60. The only difference should be in the output section, two output tubes instead of four.
The orange wire appears to come off the main transformer for the filaments. Check this against your amp.
Peavey_Triumph_120_PAG.pdfIt's not just an amp, it's an adventure!
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In the picture, the orange wire appears to come from the OT, since Red/Blue/Brown go to the output tube board and the remaining wires go to speaker jacks. My bet is that the orange wire is just an unused OT secondary tap. The amp is likely fixed bias, as are many Peaveys."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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I agree with the Dude.
Sorry, in my previous post I meant to say the PAG schematic has orange wires coming off the main transformer.
I just checked the schematic for the vanilla Triumph 60/120 (non PAG model). That OT has an orange wire for a 16 ohm output. It looks like the PAG uses a similar OT but does not use the 16 ohm tap. So... it appears you have an extra wire you can set aside.It's not just an amp, it's an adventure!
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Thanks for the replies and for the schematic. I've repaired the output jacks. I couldn't find any obvious place the orange wire went and looked at the schematic and couldn't find it, so I tucked it away. I put the amp back together. There still appears to be some issues. When there's nothing plugged into the input jacks the amp is making what sounds like AM radio. If I tap on the jacks, the noise dissipates and becomes intermittent. Must be some kind of ground issue. The reverb is also not working and when I turn it up it changes the output of the amp and injects a bunch of noise. I assume there must be some grounding issues in the amp? I'll take the amp apart and check the grounds. Any Ideas?
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Originally posted by gibson17 View Post
Resistance measures OL on both the low and high gain inputs.
Clean and re-tension the jack contacts.
If the contacts are not shorting, hum will enter the input with nothing connected.
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Originally posted by glebert View PostCall Peavey and ask for a schematic. Their tech service isn't what it used to be, but still probably better than most.
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Originally posted by glebert View PostCall Peavey and ask for a schematic. Their tech service isn't what it used to be, but still probably better than most.
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Originally posted by PatrickIHuey View PostI am about to send them the chassis out of my red stripe Bandit 112 for overhaul…lots of noise when nothing is plugged into footswitch jack even after thorough cleaning….probably needs new caps n so forth. How difficult is it to cut down the combo body into a head? Pardon me for interrupting the thread but I’m new to forum and haven’t figured out how to send PM’s. Thanks!
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View Post
Input jacks have switching contacts that should short the tip contacts to ground.
Clean and re-tension the jack contacts.
If the contacts are not shorting, hum will enter the input with nothing connected.
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If this has the molex connector, like many Peavey amps do, for the reverb tank, pull that connector and clean all the contacts on that connector. I've had problems with those in the past."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Hello All, I've had a little time with repairs on the amp. I pulled the main board and there were quite a few cold solder joints that I reflowed, specifically on the potentiometers. I pulled the reverb tank and a spring literally fell out!! There's the reverb problem. I am going to buy a new tank. I am getting some popping still at very high volumes. Unsure what's causing that... perhaps the reverb tank. Also, as I was reassembling the amp the gain pot for the clean channel just fell apart, so obviously will need to replace that. Hopefully sourcing the part isn't an issue. Lastly, there's a fan in this amp, but it is right against the cabinet... I have a bandit that has no fan but there's a vent in the cabinet where there's one on this triumph? Is this normal or did this get a new cab somewhere along the way?
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