I picked up a Dean Markley K-20X practice amp the other day. Very loud for 10-15 actual watts. Not bad sounding at all. Overdrive is pretty good. Probably going to be part of a starter package for my best friend's daughter who turns 16 in a couple weeks.
Naturally i opened it up. Curiosity, plus wondering if anything needs to be replaced or upgraded. Turns out they use LED clipping in their OD circuit.
The board is etched, drilled, and printed both sides for spring reverb. All of the component values are marked. The hole for the potentiometer is already in the chassis, just not through the control panel sticker.
Of course, I don't know the properties of the reverb tank, but i can see that it was a small one from the mounting holes. I have an Accutronics blue spring reverb i was going to use for another project, which would absolutely fit in this but maybe not on the existing mounting holes (I haven't checked). The board is printed for JST type connectors for the reverb tank, exactly like are already on the accutronics blue tank.
I can't find much info on obsolete DM practice amps. They've scrubbed their website of any information. Haven't been able to determine if there was a version of this amp with reverb.
The blue tanks come with 150 ohm, 600 ohm, or 1.5kohm input . All of them have 1.5k output. Since this design would drive and recover the tank with a TL072, I think it's probably a fair guess that 150 ohm was maybe what they used, with 600 ohm also possible. There are no transistors following the output of the TL072.
Granted, i should probably trace out the circuit and determine what was most likely from there. If it turns out they designed for 600 ohm, that tank is only $15 away.
There is no position for a switch to disable reverb. Just the mix knob.
Anyone ventured out this way before?
Naturally i opened it up. Curiosity, plus wondering if anything needs to be replaced or upgraded. Turns out they use LED clipping in their OD circuit.
The board is etched, drilled, and printed both sides for spring reverb. All of the component values are marked. The hole for the potentiometer is already in the chassis, just not through the control panel sticker.
Of course, I don't know the properties of the reverb tank, but i can see that it was a small one from the mounting holes. I have an Accutronics blue spring reverb i was going to use for another project, which would absolutely fit in this but maybe not on the existing mounting holes (I haven't checked). The board is printed for JST type connectors for the reverb tank, exactly like are already on the accutronics blue tank.
I can't find much info on obsolete DM practice amps. They've scrubbed their website of any information. Haven't been able to determine if there was a version of this amp with reverb.
The blue tanks come with 150 ohm, 600 ohm, or 1.5kohm input . All of them have 1.5k output. Since this design would drive and recover the tank with a TL072, I think it's probably a fair guess that 150 ohm was maybe what they used, with 600 ohm also possible. There are no transistors following the output of the TL072.
Granted, i should probably trace out the circuit and determine what was most likely from there. If it turns out they designed for 600 ohm, that tank is only $15 away.
There is no position for a switch to disable reverb. Just the mix knob.
Anyone ventured out this way before?
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