Thanks Chili. I can do that, but I am told that squealing without a guitar signal is not normal, so this needs a checkup. I may be over my head at this point.WOAH HEY hOLD your HORSES, RAY.
DID I get any answer to the question of do you have any other amps and separate cab you can try the effects into and see if it squeals in that one too?
I don’t mean to be a pain, but....does this happen when there is no guitar signal present at all?Thanks Chili. I can do that, but I am told that squealing without a guitar signal is not normal, so this needs a checkup. I may be over my head at this point.
Yes, exactly. No guitar in the eqaution at all. This perplexes me.I don’t mean to be a pain, but....does this happen when there is no guitar signal present at all?
Like-volume down to zero on the guitar, or unplugged even?
Yes, exactly. No guitar in the eqaution at all. This perplexes me.
More tests:
- it occurred with my Marshall
- it occurred (albiet wuth a different tone, and not as loud) with my Quilter SS amp
Not unless the Furman is failing. If the Furman is failing, would it cause the symptoms that you're hearing? I really don't know if it would, but it seems you have a lot of stuff electrically connected in your room of sonic mayhem. Take the Furman out of the chain and verify that it has nothing to do with the amp's squealing. Same thing with the pedals. You gotta make sure that any power supply adapters are not causing the problems. This is my Caveman approach to diagnosing. Which comes with a lack of proper electronics education.The amp is plugged into a Furman power conditioner. i would think that is better than the wall.
A power tube doesn't have to red-plate to be bad. Caveman approach: Swap all tubes and verify. Hopefully you have an extra pair of 6V6s.I swapped the pre-amp tubes separately (only 1 new tube at a time). The power tubes were not changed, but there was no obvious red-plating or anything
Touching tip and sleeve result in a 0 readingAlright then....still got your meter handy? Maybe try pulling the cable out of the amp input, and check for any stray voltage, that could be firing up the amp inputs, by the dirtbox(es)?
I would assume DC voltage(anything approaching 1Volt would be “bad”).
Ok... This is crazy! Time to call an Exorcist!!More tests:
- it occurred with my Marshall
- it occurred with my Peavey ValveKing
- it occurred (albiet wuth a different tone, and not as loud) with my Quilter SS amp
- it occurred with 10 feet of separation between the Ceriatone and the speaker cab
I should try JUST this pedal into the front of the ampOk... This is crazy! Time to call an Exorcist!!
Yes. If you have it powered by a power supply, but have the option for battery power, please try it with both power sources...and let us know what happens as a result.I should try JUST this pedal into the front of the amp
Cool...OK, going JUST the high gain pedal into the amp changed everything. I got the usual noise you would expect with ahigh gain pedal and the channel volume and master dimed with the guitar plugged in. I got silence with no guitar and channel volume and master dimed. I guess this sort of thing happens when you have 18 pedals in your front end chain!
Now introduce one pedal at a time till you find the culprit!Smart! I think it is time to rebuild my pedal board - or whatever it is!!Cool...Now introduce one pedal at a time till you find the culprit!
The frustration was an education!!Sorry for your frustrations.