Good morning...I haven't posted a repair question for quite some time......but here goes.....a friend of mine dropped off this amp for repair......he was complaining about getting shocks from the amp.....it has been in storage for years and full of corrosion and rust inside the chassis....I had to remove the transformer and had to repair one of the primary winding wires as it was practically rotted away from corrosion....I repaired it and insulated it with some shrink wrap and then did a continunity check and everything seemed ok...I measured voltages for the different windings and everything seems good....however, when checking for leakage between the transformer frame and the main B+ winding I am getting a voltage reading of 60 something volts AC.....if I go to a low voltage winding i get around 7 VAC.....I did a resistance check from all the transformer windings to the frame and there is no indication of any leakage...at least on the meter and I used to different meters to double check.....so...the transformer is faulty??? how will I know for sure as I really don not want to install this if there is a problem??? any comments, advice , etc, greatly appreciated........
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Fender 68 Super reverb amp...power transformer issues?????
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Presumably the chassis wasn't earth grounded? I'm super frugal and hate having to replace the expensive bits of an amp, but in this case it seems like it is necessary. Your friend was already getting shocked by it, you see AC voltage on the frame, so I say it needs a new PT. I don't want anyone's headstone to read "He Saved $300."
I would probably pop the bell covers off the PT though and see what it looked like inside, just because I'd want to see if there was an obvious cause.
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I guess you're measuring a "ghost voltage".
This would be a voltage due to the capacitance between winding and frame/core.
Try measuring again with a 10k resistor connected between meter leads.
A ghost voltage will collapse when loaded.- Own Opinions Only -
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Maybe there's moisture in the PT? You could pop the bell covers and bake it in the oven at 170F for an hour. Then open the oven and blow a fan in there until every is cool and re test. Nothing to lose."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Measuring resistance between a winding and core with a DMM can be misleading. It can tell you if the transformer is bad, but won't necessarily tell you if its good. This is down to the meter's test voltage and to overcome this an insulation tester is need that applies a high enough voltage to check for breakdown leakage.
Ghost voltages are a bit of trap and I often forget to put my DMM into low impedance mode when checking.
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Originally posted by glebert View PostPresumably the chassis wasn't earth grounded? I'm super frugal and hate having to replace the expensive bits of an amp, but in this case it seems like it is necessary. Your friend was already getting shocked by it, you see AC voltage on the frame, so I say it needs a new PT. I don't want anyone's headstone to read "He Saved $300."
I would probably pop the bell covers off the PT though and see what it looked like inside, just because I'd want to see if there was an obvious cause.
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostI guess you're measuring a "ghost voltage".
This would be a voltage due to the capacitance between winding and frame/core.
Try measuring again with a 10k resistor connected between meter leads.
A ghost voltage will collapse when loaded.
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostI guess you're measuring a "ghost voltage".
This would be a voltage due to the capacitance between winding and frame/core.
Try measuring again with a 10k resistor connected between meter leads.
A ghost voltage will collapse when loaded.
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostBe careful, a ghost voltage will not heat the resistor.
Will elaborate later.
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Oh well, the 10k load resistor was only meant for measuring between frame/core and winding.
If placed across the HV winding the resistor will dissipate 50W. No sense doing so.
What about some electronics basics?
And please do spend a 0 before a decimal point. Otherwise I tend to misinterpret the number especially when there are that many useless dots in a text.
No one would leave out the zero before the decimal point over here, so I'm not used to it.
Also weak eyes.- Own Opinions Only -
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So a measure of 0.435VAC would indicate sufficient collapse of the suspected "ghost voltage" for an accurate diagnosis??? This is a great tip by the way and thanks for that."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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