ok, I'll try and spell this out as much as I can to make this easy for any responders, and 'thank you' ahead of time:
Picked up a Fender Princeton 112 Plus amp for pretty cheap and have been messing with it since I bought it. I recently changed out the volume pot as it was installed linear, and I wanted audio.
I've only played the amp for short periods of time since doing the before mentioned change. Today I played abit longer, and suddenly there was a 'pop', and then the audio signal faded away I cracked the amp open to see what was cooking (something smelled hot). Turns out, I installed the heatsink upside down, and it wasn't even touching the metal bar that the transistors were attached to. More research online had me on my way to Radio Shack for thermal compound and some new fuses.
I completely took out the circuit board to inspect for any burn marks. Didn't find any. I then layed on a layer of thermal compound, installed correctly, replaced fuse (bought slow-burn). With some speaker wire to extend my reach so I wouldn't have to put the amp back into the case, I powered it on; loud hum, fuse fried up within 2-3 seconds.
SO, I'm already thinking I caused some 'heat' damage from not having that heatsink installed correctly the first time. Transistors first to look at?
So here is more info before you ask: I don't have a multimeter, the transistors are "tip142 and tip147" which seem cheap online. Only info I have on caps is 2200uf 50v. I can't solder worth crap, but I'll try my butt off
So what should I do? Should I order transistors and caps?...or just transistors?...or take to local repair guy?
Picked up a Fender Princeton 112 Plus amp for pretty cheap and have been messing with it since I bought it. I recently changed out the volume pot as it was installed linear, and I wanted audio.
I've only played the amp for short periods of time since doing the before mentioned change. Today I played abit longer, and suddenly there was a 'pop', and then the audio signal faded away I cracked the amp open to see what was cooking (something smelled hot). Turns out, I installed the heatsink upside down, and it wasn't even touching the metal bar that the transistors were attached to. More research online had me on my way to Radio Shack for thermal compound and some new fuses.
I completely took out the circuit board to inspect for any burn marks. Didn't find any. I then layed on a layer of thermal compound, installed correctly, replaced fuse (bought slow-burn). With some speaker wire to extend my reach so I wouldn't have to put the amp back into the case, I powered it on; loud hum, fuse fried up within 2-3 seconds.
SO, I'm already thinking I caused some 'heat' damage from not having that heatsink installed correctly the first time. Transistors first to look at?
So here is more info before you ask: I don't have a multimeter, the transistors are "tip142 and tip147" which seem cheap online. Only info I have on caps is 2200uf 50v. I can't solder worth crap, but I'll try my butt off
So what should I do? Should I order transistors and caps?...or just transistors?...or take to local repair guy?
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