So, I'm just finishing up some repairs on a 1977 Wurlitzer 200A Electric Piano--I'd replaced all the electrolytics and corrected some errors a previous tech made in the Aux and Headphone outputs. It sounds great and is much quieter than it was. Until....
While it's just sitting there turned on, a loud hum suddenly comes through the speakers because it had just suffered a cascade failure of two of the small signal transistors on the amplifier board (TR9 and TR10).
You fix a Hammond Organ, and it runs for years. You fix a Wurlie, and it runs for half an hour before it decides to have another nervous breakdown...
Were these early solid state amps simply under-designed? For a fairly low-power amplifier, they seem to self-destruct pretty often.
While it's just sitting there turned on, a loud hum suddenly comes through the speakers because it had just suffered a cascade failure of two of the small signal transistors on the amplifier board (TR9 and TR10).
You fix a Hammond Organ, and it runs for years. You fix a Wurlie, and it runs for half an hour before it decides to have another nervous breakdown...
Were these early solid state amps simply under-designed? For a fairly low-power amplifier, they seem to self-destruct pretty often.
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