Cadorman
Ambassador of the Catocaster
Looks like you spilled a little bong water there.
Looks like you spilled a little bong water there.
Great news man keep it upFantastic man! If it weren't for the lounge pants I wear all day you would never know that I had the top of my femur hacked off and a titanium spike hammered in to replace it.
No. Nothing has been done here and they are directly underneath where th Dr tube pcb is mounted
Will report back shortlyOK
I don't have the board in front of me so I can't tell a lot..
but there's something about this I don't get at the moment.
Go ahead and
Set the meter for DC volts.
Connect black probe to the chassis.
Connect red probe to pin 5 of the output socket.
You can do this from the top of the socket, you don't need to do this inside the amp.
2. Turn the power on, but leave the standby set to "warm-up."
Do not turn the standby to "operate."
3. You should read -42 volts DC on pin 5 of each socket. Leave the probe stuck into pin 5 from the top of the socket.
4. Now turn the standby to "operate" for about 10 seconds.
How much did the -42 volts DC pin 5 change when you switched the standby to "operate ?"
5. Test all 4 sockets pin 5.
Write down how much the -42 volts changes, when you turn the standby to operate.
6. Now report how much the voltage changed on each socket.
Standby "warm up" = what voltage on pin 5?
Standby "operate," what voltage on pin 5?
Report the DC readings for all the output sockets pin 5..difference between warm-up and operate?
Each socket reads about -41.5 vdcOK
I don't have the board in front of me so I can't tell a lot..
but there's something about this I don't get at the moment.
Go ahead and
Set the meter for DC volts.
Connect black probe to the chassis.
Connect red probe to pin 5 of the output socket.
You can do this from the top of the socket, you don't need to do this inside the amp.
2. Turn the power on, but leave the standby set to "warm-up."
Do not turn the standby to "operate."
3. You should read -42 volts DC on pin 5 of each socket. Leave the probe stuck into pin 5 from the top of the socket.
4. Now turn the standby to "operate" for about 10 seconds.
How much did the -42 volts DC pin 5 change when you switched the standby to "operate ?"
5. Test all 4 sockets pin 5.
Write down how much the -42 volts changes, when you turn the standby to operate.
6. Now report how much the voltage changed on each socket.
Standby "warm up" = what voltage on pin 5?
Standby "operate," what voltage on pin 5?
Report the DC readings for all the output sockets pin 5..difference between warm-up and operate?
All were about -42 before standby in warm up, then were about-41.5 after standby switch to operateEach socket reads about -41.5 vdc
All were about -42 before standby in warm up, then were about-41.5 after standby switch to operate
Pin 3: 2.5 vdc all across...
Pin4: 2.46 vacation all across
Wait!!
Standby to OPERATE
PIN 3: 521 VDC
PIN 4: 524-526 VDC
3.7 AC across all sockets pin 2OK turn standby to warm-up. Do not turn standby to operate.
Turn power on.
Set meter to AC volts.
Connect black probe to chassis.
Connect red probe to pin 2, what is the AC voltage on pin 2 of the output socket?
Connect red probe to pin 7, what is the AC voltage on pin 7?
Test all 4 output sockets.
Report the AC volt readings for pin 2 and pin 7 of each output socket.
OK now plug a speaker cable into your speaker cabinet.
OK so the speaker must be connected to the 16 ohm out of the amp.15 ohms...
Yes, I've set bias with this amp many times but what do you mean MUST connect to the 16 ohm jack? This is what I normally do, but is this related to the jack grounding issue I've heard tell about? I have only 1 1960A that I've ever used at @ 16ohmsOK so the speaker must be connected to the 16 ohm out of the amp.
Now, do you know how to set the bias on a TSL?