I've never had that before, but this new amp I built does that.
When I turn it off there is some "clicking" noises coming from the main filter cap (or at least it seems to be coming from there).
The main filter cap is the only one that is outside the amp (an F&T 16/16 can)
It does that pretty much right after switching off (whether the amp was on the standby or not).
It's also the first amp I do with a tube rectifier (GZ34) which is just next to the cap can.
I noticed the cap discharges pretty quickly (perhaps cause it's such a low value) through the tubes. A few seconds and it reads 0V.
If I switch to Standby first, it takes a little more time (still discharges rather quickly through the preamp tubes and the 288Kohms bleeder circuit).
Could it be the quick discharge that does that?
My Marshall clone (with a JJ paralleled 50/50 uF main filter cap and SS recto) does not do that.
There is no sound at all coming through the speaker, it's really just coming from the amp itself. I'm assuming it's harmless... but just making sure.
When I turn it off there is some "clicking" noises coming from the main filter cap (or at least it seems to be coming from there).
The main filter cap is the only one that is outside the amp (an F&T 16/16 can)
It does that pretty much right after switching off (whether the amp was on the standby or not).
It's also the first amp I do with a tube rectifier (GZ34) which is just next to the cap can.
I noticed the cap discharges pretty quickly (perhaps cause it's such a low value) through the tubes. A few seconds and it reads 0V.
If I switch to Standby first, it takes a little more time (still discharges rather quickly through the preamp tubes and the 288Kohms bleeder circuit).
Could it be the quick discharge that does that?
My Marshall clone (with a JJ paralleled 50/50 uF main filter cap and SS recto) does not do that.
There is no sound at all coming through the speaker, it's really just coming from the amp itself. I'm assuming it's harmless... but just making sure.
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