T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
424.1 | I've heard of them! | VIDEO::BUSENBARK | | Mon Dec 14 1987 09:10 | 5 |
| MDS has bought several companies inventory when they went
Chapter 11,for example Arp synthe's and Linn Drum's are 2
I remember. I wonder who else they handle?......
Rick
|
424.2 | another source for obsolete equipment | UPWARD::HEISER | when you're sold out, the mark shows | Fri Apr 20 1990 14:08 | 10 |
| I called MDS in .0 to find some volume/tone knobs and whammy bar for my
Mustang. They didn't have either, but recommended I try this place
that also deals with obsolete stuff. This place did have the knobs for
the Mustang.
Angela Instruments
8600 Foundry St.
PO Box 2043
Savage, Maryland 20763
(301) 725-0451
|
424.3 | | POBOX::DAVIA | Hey Monk, is that a new hat?? | Fri Apr 20 1990 19:21 | 12 |
|
-< Need Champ 12 power switch >-
I hope this is the right note...
My "new" Fender Champ 12 needs a new power switch. Is there a Fender
"parts" place that I could order a Champ 12 power switch from?? Anybody
out there know?
Phil
|
424.4 | | UPWARD::HEISER | If Dora Plays Like Me Alls Lost | Fri Apr 20 1990 20:15 | 7 |
| > My "new" Fender Champ 12 needs a new power switch. Is there a Fender
> "parts" place that I could order a Champ 12 power switch from?? Anybody
> out there know?
Phil, if its discontinued, try one of the places in .0 or .2
Mike
|
424.5 | Fender's phone # ? | VAXWRK::SAKELARIS | | Fri Jun 01 1990 17:00 | 13 |
| I'd like to restore my Fender Super Six amp. I want to try to get the
original grill cloth or at least something close to it before I use
the generic black mesh thats commercially available. I'd also like to
get a new metal bezel which I'll bet is impossible. Anybody out there
know the phone number for Fender or someone else who might be able to
supply what I need? I'll try the places that are mentioned in the
earlier replies.
Maybe there's another place for this, but has anybody ever tried to
recover the tolex on you amp. Is it difficult, any snags, or any advice
you'd care to offer?
Thanx, "sakman"
|
424.6 | Recovering cabinets | COOKIE::G_HOUSE | No, I'm very, very shy. | Fri Jun 01 1990 20:30 | 5 |
| Note 1553 has a lot of information on recovering cabinets/amps in both
tolex and ozite. Check it out, I think you'll find the information you
want there.
Greg
|
424.7 | In the 1200s - 1241? maybe? | SMURF::BENNETT | Legalize it. End Gang Wars. | Mon Jun 04 1990 12:38 | 6 |
|
There's a note with manufacturer info. Fender's phone number is in
there. There's also a note in here somewhere where Tom Gallo posted
some info about a company that stocks obsolete Fender parts.
ccb
|
424.8 | You gotta be a dealer?? | LEDS::ORSI | Stimpy's Magic Nose Goblins | Fri Sep 18 1992 16:54 | 12 |
|
Has anyone called MDS lately? I called a the number in .0 and
got a recording that said it was disconnected. Then I called the
number listed in Pittmans' Tube Amp book V3 800-722-8171 and a
woman there told me the MDS number is 800-488-1818. So I called
and was asked if I was a dealer, I said no, and she told me I
would have to order parts through an authorized dealer. In
my area that would be either Kurlans or RMI. I need some hard-
ware for a Fender amp.
Neal
|
424.9 | | LEDS::BURATI | or maybe just a change of climate | Fri Sep 18 1992 20:25 | 12 |
| What a pisser! That's exactly the kind of thing dealers are (in general)
pretty bad at handling. I'd call Fender, Neal, and tell them you want to
order parts. See where they steer ya. They're the ones that gave me the
number for MDS when I ordered parts from them. Something musta changed.
Damn, MDS was pretty easy to deal with, too. Anybody out there know a
Fender dealer that's not a bozo that might have someone competent enough
working for them that could handle an odd little order for some obscure
parts and not FIUp? I don't. Damn. The problem with music stores is that
they're mostly run by musicians, as opposed to people with their
shi...errr, doo-doo together.
--Ron
|
424.10 | A "Service" Department???? | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Sat Sep 19 1992 11:52 | 60 |
|
>>Damn, MDS was pretty easy to deal with, too. Anybody out there know a
>>Fender dealer that's not a bozo that might have someone competent enough
>>working for them that could handle an odd little order for some obscure
>>parts and not FIUp? I don't. Damn. The problem with music stores is that
I don't either... I had a heck of an experience recently with
my '68 Deluxe Reverb. My tremolo died -- rest of the amp was fine.
I checked the basics (tubes, footswitch...) and couldn't find anything.
So I took my amp to my local Fender dealer (one of the larger stores
in the metro-Detroit area, and part of a 3-store chain), where I
had bought the amp (used). It took them five weeks to "fix" it.
I came to pick it up, and wisely decided to try it out before leaving.
Well... the tremolo did work, but the rest of the amp was seriously
sick. Major cut in gain, terribly loud hum. I quickly turned the
thing off. They said they'd send it back to their repair center
and put a rush on it.
Five weeks later (after several phone calls), I finally get my
amp back. I try it out at the store and it sounds OK. The repairman
claims he didn't do anything (so why did it take five weeks?!).
I take the amp home and notice my tube retainers are missing. I stop
back in to the store and raise a ruckus... They say they'll find
them.
A couple days later, I'm doing a little jamming in my basement and
the amp starts making terrible noises. I turn it off and back on
and it's real quiet -- TOO quiet. I check out the tubes and I have
a bad pre-amp tube. So that's been the problem -- a flakey tube --
I say to my self. I stick in a different tube (an old one, just
in case) and the amp seems fine. I leave the amp on for a few minutes
(guitar is not even plugged in), and SNAP, crackle, POP! I started
hearing the same noises I heard right before the other tube went
bad. I quickly turn the amp off.
I stop at the store over lunch. They quickly run over to tell me
they have my tube retainers -- I tell them about the amp and demand
back the $30 I paid for the original "repair." The store manager says
to let him try one more time. I tell him that I started with a
perfectly good amp with no tremolo, and now I have a totally unreliable
amp. They suggest that perhaps the problem was with my guitar. I
point out that the amp has problems with all of my electric guitars,
and the guitars are perfectly happy with my other two amps. They
still think it might be my guitar. I tell them again that the amp
was making terrible noises with nothing plugged in. They stammer
for a little bit... Finally, I agree to bring the amp in one more
time.
Five more weeks!!!! I get the amp back. It seems to work OK.
Repair department still claims they did nothing to it. The amp has
been OK since. I haven't been back to the store.
With service like this, I'm going to mail order.
Jim
PS...
There are a few decent dealers out there, but they seem to be the
exception.
|
424.11 | | LEDS::BURATI | or maybe just a change of climate | Sat Sep 19 1992 14:59 | 5 |
| Jim,
Your note's like dejavu all over again.
--Ron
|
424.12 | roll your own | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Buckethead for president | Mon Sep 21 1992 08:58 | 12 |
| Horror stories like this point up the advantages of rolling your
own when it comes to amp repair. I wouldn't necessarily suggest it
for modern transistor or complicated multi-channel jobs, but anyone
who owns an older Fender or similar ought to be able to do their
own repairs pretty easily. This stuff isn't rocket science, and
there are a lot of good books and materials to help even the greenest
novice along. One of these repair aids will pay for itself the
first time you have an amp problem, not to mention the savings in
aggravation and time lost without your amp. Plus, there's always
the Guitar notes experts to fall back on.
/rick
|
424.13 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | All over but the shouting | Mon Sep 21 1992 10:59 | 12 |
| Or using an amp tech that you know to be reliable instead of a music
store. I've had similar experiences at a couple of places and I avoid
them for repairs. One place charged me a $40 surcharge to send my old
preamp back to ADA for work when I could have sent it myself! I took
it to that place because they were an ADA dealer and supposedly could
repair them. Then a couple of weeks later, some dude from ADA in CA
calls me up to ask about the problem. Not only did this place tack on
the extra money, but they made the repair take between 2 and 3 weeks
longer then it took ADA to do it. "We had to send it to Denver, and
they sent it to ADA..." Gimme a break...
gh
|
424.14 | | BUSY::VMESITE | | Tue Sep 22 1992 07:22 | 16 |
| Oh YEAH! I stopped doing repairs for stores a LONG time ago, as most
of them promise the world, then deliver nothing, NEVER pay the service
guys (AKA: me) and then blame it on the techs when they can't get their
act in order. I've done more free-be repairs to folks who have been
burned then I want to count, and a few stores (one BIG name in Boston)
owe me $$$$$$$$. IF ya have a older Fender, buy the Tube book and
LEARN how to fix it, change tubes, bias it yerself. That's how
I got into this crap. I got tired of the local dealer NOT fixing
my Twin, and charging me $40 a hour NOT to fix it.
Besides, you all have one of the best sources for info/help around.
This Notes file.
Jay Tashjian
|
424.15 | | LEDS::BURATI | or maybe just a change of climate | Tue Sep 22 1992 13:05 | 6 |
|
Fix it yourself. That's how I got into electronics, etc. But beware of
the 450 volt B+ lines inside tube amps. You can get seriously hurt in
there. Even seriously dead.
--Ron
|
424.16 | Cost of tools? | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Low self opinion | Tue Sep 22 1992 13:07 | 4 |
| I'd probably be willing, but aren't there some fairly expensive tools
required to do tube amp repair? Oscilloscopes and what have you?
Greg
|
424.17 | | LEDS::BURATI | or maybe just a change of climate | Tue Sep 22 1992 13:15 | 6 |
| Greg,
Most repairs can be done with a VOM (volt-ohm meter) and a good
soldering iron and some sidecutting pliers.
--Ron
|
424.18 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Low self opinion | Tue Sep 22 1992 13:56 | 4 |
| I thought a scope was required to do biasing? Am I totally outta touch
or what?
Greg
|
424.19 | | LEDS::ORSI | Stimpy's Magic Nose Goblins | Tue Sep 22 1992 14:22 | 12 |
|
>I thought a scope was required to do biasing? Am I totally outta touch
>or what?
>Greg
Yes, you need a scope, signal generator, a voltmeter,
and a ~100 watt dummy load to bias an amp. I've done
3 or 4 Fender amps in the last few weeks.
Neal
|
424.20 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Low self opinion | Tue Sep 22 1992 14:31 | 1 |
| Seems to be cost prohibative for me...
|
424.21 | | MSDOA::BLAIR | Don't let it start! | Tue Sep 22 1992 14:43 | 6 |
|
It's like cars. Some fixes you can do yourself, some are
beyond your equipment/cost/knowledge limits. It's not an
all or nothing thing. I am thinking about taking an
electronics course at Greenville Tech just so I won't be
a total electronics feeb all my life. Might also be fun.
|
424.22 | | LEDS::BURATI | MY BOYS CAN SWIM! | Tue Sep 22 1992 15:00 | 9 |
| Well, although you can do a better job biasing an amp with an
oscilloscope, if you have a schematic with the bias voltage called out
on it, you can do a decent approximation from that, provided that all
the other voltages are correct. If they're not, you need to determine
why they aren't and fix that problem first, before you bias, anyway.
That ought to get you to within a few percent of optimal. It's better
than giving it to some yuckaluck store yahoo.
--Ron
|
424.23 | | KDX200::COOPER | I even use TONE soap !! | Tue Sep 22 1992 15:18 | 5 |
| I thought Groove toobs sold a gadget to do it without a scope ?
Some sort of probe ?? Still, me thinks Charlie over at Rice is worth
the $25 to rebias. :)
jc
|
424.24 | | BUSY::VMESITE | | Wed Sep 23 1992 07:18 | 8 |
| I can add nothing to the last few notes, but yup. It's like cars.
that bias-probe isn't sold anymore. It was not very stable, and
burnt quite a bit.
The best bet is to find a good service dude/dudette and pay 'em the
monnies to keep ya junk in tune. They are out there.
|
424.25 | beware.... | ROYALT::BUSENBARK | | Wed Sep 23 1992 07:19 | 12 |
| GT does sell a probe to do biasing which plugs into a vom,however I'm
not sure as to the cost. I've heard of other techniques of doing
biasing by measuring current however I have never had any experiance
with doing it this way. Ron is correct about tube amp maintenance
alot of it can be done with a simple meter and schem's. After you get
your feet wet you can recognize problems fairly quickly. It certainly
is a lot more comforting to know some guy isn't hacking away at your
amp..... As there are some amp techs out there who shouldn't be even
holding a soldering iron!
Rick
|
424.26 | | BUSY::VMESITE | | Wed Sep 23 1992 07:22 | 11 |
| You got that right. 50% of my repairs are from some 'tech-ie' who
thought he/she could make a Marshall out of a Plush. "There ought
to be a law!"
Again I say, if ya find the right repair dude/dudette, they are worth
the $$$. AND the right tech backs up his/her work, me, I do it for
life of the unit.....but only the work I did.
Jay Tashjian
|