for now the amp is not pulling down the power supply and is running cool to the touch. Looks like maybe the amp portion is ok and time to move upstream.
now it looks like noise is being introduced somewhere in the preamps, I have a parasitic ocillation on the wave form on all preamp and 5069 board, gets worse the higher the frequncey. So far been a buger to isolate. any good way to jumper past the 3 boards one at a time to find problem? I can put my scope on the input and when I turn it up just a little boom trash on top of sine wave.Hmmmm
Finished repair a couple of week ago. Thought I would update final repair. Amplifier worked but had a odd 3mhz oscillation on the output. After a lot of head scratching a talk with Bill we added snubber caps on the drivers which were replaced. This did take care of the problem. The new transistors of today are of higher performance and higher bandwidth gain then the old transistor, so you have to degrade or reduce the bandwidth to not introduce the reproduction in this case of the power supply ripple. Nice to know now and makes sense. Amp is stable and really a nice product with its matching dual 15-inch cabinet in folded finish. The customer got this at a garage sale for 50$ and seems pretty darn happy now.
stevem Messages: 4663 Registered: June 2004 Location: NY
Senior Member
Good to hear and I am glad you had the patience to stick with it!
You customer being happy will be great word of mouth for you.
Here's a old story you will relate with I think.
I had SS Vox Beatle head that was a very late model made just before Thomas organ ditched them.
These had very long wires to the T03 output transistors on the far side of the chassis.
This guys amp would blow the outputs when others that I repaired would not.
Now in these late amps I found out that they changed the wiring layout.
At first I thought that it was because this guy used to play the amp dam loud and the amp would go into run away heat over load, so I put a big Ass fan blowing on the heat sinks but it blew yet again.
I finally look at the thing and found that it was oscillating way up there like yours.
I came to the conclusion that it was due to the long and uneven wire length feeding the outputs which was making for a uneven impeadence load on the outputs.
To counter that I added a 10 ohm 1/2 watt resistor in line with all of the four base leads right at the transistors.
The result, I never saw that amp again and in fact I know the next person who now owns it and where talking 18 years since the new owner has had it!