My Peavey KB 60 is not sounding right on my Roland JV-1010 sound module. The highs on the EQ from the Roland JV-1010 to the amp are ear splitting! And the bass is powerful, but so loud at a low level it is inaudible. And I CANNOT find a middle ground with my EQ settings! When I 1st got this amp, the amp sounded great! But now the piano sounds dull, flat and the highs on the keyboard are loud and distorted, and it almost sounds like when I play with both hands, the audio dampens a bit, as if it is too much for the amp too handle. And the volume is at a low setting! So I will buy the Peavey Funk Out cleaner. Please tell me, by these photos attached. What to clean with it!!
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Peavey KB 60 Help!
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I don't know that anything in particular needs cleaning. But I would determine if the piezo was working or not, and if working that it sounds good. In fact I'd probably connect the amp chassis to some other speaker to determine if the chassis had the issue or the speaker.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostI don't know that anything in particular needs cleaning. But I would determine if the piezo was working or not, and if working that it sounds good. In fact I'd probably connect the amp chassis to some other speaker to determine if the chassis had the issue or the speaker.
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Piezo is short for piezoelectric, as in that piezoelectric tweeter in the corner of the front. The blue and yellow wires are the main output from the amp chassis down to your woofer. From there, the red and black wires go up to your piezo.
Piezoelectric is the more scientific term for what used to be called "crystal." A cheap crystal microphone was one that used a piezoelectric crytal to generate signal when you sang at it. Cheap phonograph cartidges were crystal types.
PLug a CD player or something into the amp and just play some music through it. The woofer sound will be obvious, but you can put your ear to the tweeter and hear if sound is coming out. Or roll a magazine up into a tube, hold it to your ear, and listen to the tweter through that. It will act like a doctor's stethoscope to hear what is coming out.
THis whole piezo thing is just a simple initial test. It it has a crtacked crystal inside or has stopped working, you will want another, and they are vimple to change with four screws.
ALWAYS ALWAYS note which wires go where if you disconnect anything. I have been working on amps over 50 years and I STILL always draw a little diagram of wire colors or numbers whenever I pull them off. Just as soon as I tell myself "Oh I'll remember", the phone will ring and my wife will have a flatr tire, and off I go, only to return and "Hmmm, what goes where???"
You got no other speaks? That's too bad. I'd try the amp through a PA cab or the speaker from a different combo if I had it. And the opposite too. I;d play some other amp through that speaker setup. we always disconnect amp and speaker before connecting eithre to other things.
I'll have to go fetch the schematic for that one, but I will assume it has FX loop jacks or maybe insert jack. Those can get dirty and affect sound quality.
Are you able to solder parts on and off the circuit board, and have you a meter that you know how to make readings with?Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Oh my goodness! Well 1st things first.
1. Thanks for the Piezoelectric lesson, lol.
2. Just plug a CD player in one of the inputs of the Peavey and play music out of it? If so, I have. None of the EQ settings make it sound good. It sounds terrible. Don't even use the MID. That sounds like crap. My 40w Logitech speakers sound better than that peavey!
3. I am not that advanced when it comes to musical electronics. I have a degree in computer technology, but not electronics I just have and know about audio. Like that the Peavey KB 60 takes 1/4 inch jacks. And if needed, I could plug my 3.5mm headphones (with the use of a 3.5mm to 1/4 adapter) into the amp. But I am not gonna even go near the wires. I will probably sell the amp.
4. Like I said, I am retarded when it comes to ANY SERIOUS electrical stuff. So no on the soldering. lol.
5. Meter? For what? Refer to number 4 if you wonder why I am confused. lol ^
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OK, if you studied computer technology, then you should follow that troubleshooting is just a systematic way to isolate the problem to a certain section. Just as a computer system might use substitution to determine if a problem was in the powr supply, the video card, the I/O card, the hard drive, or whatever.
So that was what trying other speakers was for, just as sticking a different hard drive into a computer would tell you if that was what had been wrong.
These amps can sound pretty good when they work right. Yours has something wrong, but we don;t yet know where. If it is beyond your tech skills to go further, no shame in that. I will admit that I know darn little about computers.
If you want to try cleaner, well why not? Can't hurt. About the only places I can think that would do this are the jacks like Effects return, Power Amp In, or Insert. WHichever ones of those you may or may not have on that model. Other than that, your problem will be electronic in nature, or a bad speaker/piezo.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Ok then. My problem was that I don't have another "hard drive" per say, to test things on. All I have is a Peavey KB1 as my backup amp. I will probably sell this Peavey KB 60 and buy a Behringer Ultratone K1800FX, 180 watt amp. My only concern, is that I want clean, unaltered sound. Look below at all the EQ effects!
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Originally posted by Jazz P Bass View PostLet me put it this way.
I would take the Peavey in for repair in a heartbeat, knowing that the factory itself is behind me.
Parts, tech support and a well built product.
The chance of repairing it is 100%.
None of that applies to the Behringer.
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