My favorite amp. I have two, actually, and use one of them in my band. I just finished a thorough rebuild of that one and it's working and sounding great. I made some mods, however, and have a question.
I changed the standby switch to a "Fender style'. Before it shorted the signals coming from the phase inverter together before they entered the grids on the power tubes. I moved it to cut the power going into the choke. Now, I get a slight "pop" when I switch it on or off....which I've heard on Fender amps as well. Is there a cure for this, or it's just part of the game with a Fender style standby?
Also, I am getting ready to go through my second 1484. Someone has already done a number of things to this one, such as replacing all the electrolyitcs. On my first one I used the stock values (4 X 100µF @ 150volts and 1 X 100µF @ 50 Volts). On this one, whomever put in 5 X 150µF @ 200 volts. This amp has a solid state rectifier and I'm attaching a schematic. My question is, was this necessary and will it have any other effect other than increased filtering?
I changed the standby switch to a "Fender style'. Before it shorted the signals coming from the phase inverter together before they entered the grids on the power tubes. I moved it to cut the power going into the choke. Now, I get a slight "pop" when I switch it on or off....which I've heard on Fender amps as well. Is there a cure for this, or it's just part of the game with a Fender style standby?
Also, I am getting ready to go through my second 1484. Someone has already done a number of things to this one, such as replacing all the electrolyitcs. On my first one I used the stock values (4 X 100µF @ 150volts and 1 X 100µF @ 50 Volts). On this one, whomever put in 5 X 150µF @ 200 volts. This amp has a solid state rectifier and I'm attaching a schematic. My question is, was this necessary and will it have any other effect other than increased filtering?
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